Showing posts with label Counting Syllables. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Counting Syllables. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

HELLO MY NAME IS - Day 15

  Happy National Poetry Month!

(Feel free to search for poems in the sidebar or watch videos in the tab above.)


Hello, Poetry Friends! This month I am sharing poems written in the voice of Little Red Riding Hood, and I invite you to join me in writing in the voice of someone else too. You might choose a fairy tale character or a book character or a person from history or anyone else real or imagined. These are your poems, so you make the decisions. Each April day, I will share my poem and a little bit about writing poetry. Mostly, we’ll just be writing in short lines with good words and not worrying about rhyming. Meaning first. Our focus this month will be adopting the perspective of another…for 30 days. I invite you to join me in this project! To do so, simply:

1. Choose a character from fiction or history or somewhere else in the world of space and time, and commit to writing a daily poem in this person's voice for the 30 days of April 2025. You might even choose an animal.

2. Write a new poem for each day of April. Feel free to print and find inspiration from this idea sheet that I will be writing from all month long.


Teachers, if you wish to share any HELLO MY NAME IS... subjects or poems, please email them to me at the contact button above. I would love to read what your students write and learn from how they approach their own projects.

LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD'S POEMS SO FAR

And now for today!


Students - Today's little verse can be read as a little verse...or you can sing it to the tune of "The Itsy Bitsy Spider." The syllables are not a perfect match, but it works for me today. 

Even though this verse is short, I still fiddled around a lot with the words. In line 4, I had originally written brings instead of calls. In line 5, I had originally written adds her instead of mixes. And in line 7, I had originally written when cinnamon fills the air instead of when cinnamon rides the sky. Sometimes changing one or two words can really lift a poem.

If you want to write with a song meter, it helps to count the syllables in each line and write them down the page. For example, "The Itsy Bitsy Spider" goes like this:

The Itsy Bitsy Spider

7

6

4

6

4

6

8

6

Feel free to count the syllables in my verse today to find where they don't match. I can still sing it along, because so much of singing is the holding of notes. :)

Thank you for joining me on this fifteenth day of HELLO MY NAME IS... We are halfway through the month of Lou poems.

To learn about more National Poetry Month projects and all kinds of April goodness, visit Jama's Alphabet Soup where Jama has generously gathered this coming month's Kidlitosphere poetry happenings. And if you are interested in learning about or writing from any of my previous 14 National Poetry Month projects, you can find them here. Happy National Poetry Month!

xo,

Amy

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Monday, April 6, 2015

Day 6 - National Poetry Month 2015 - Sing That Poem!

Happy National Poetry Month!
Welcome to Day 6 of this Year's Poem Farm Project!

Find the Complete April 2015 Poem and Song List Here

First, I would like to welcome all old and new friends to The Poem Farm this April. Spring is a busy time on all farms, and this one is no exception.  Each April, many poets and bloggers take on special poetry projects, and I'm doing so too.  You can learn all about Sing That Poem! and how to play on my April 1st post, where you will also find the list of the whole month's poems and tunes as I write and share them.  If you'd like to print out a matching game page for yourself, you can find one here, and during April 2015, you'll be able to see the song list right over there in the left hand sidebar.

Yesterday's poem was Winterspring.  Here is the tune that goes along with it, below. Did you figure it out?



And here, below, is today's poem.  Look at the song list in the sidebar or on your matching form to see if you can puzzle out which tune matches this one.

Wyoming
Photo by Amy LV


Students - Today is April 6th, and this means that we have waltzed our way through one fifth of the poemsongs for this month.  I thought it would be a good idea to offer a tip for figuring out the tunes. This hint comes from how I write them.

Songs often have patterns, and these patterns are built from syllable counts per line and repeated words and repeated rhymes and other sounds.  To write these poemsongs, each day I begin with a song in mind. I choose a tune from the matching form or the list in the sidebar there to the left and then count out the number of syllables per line all the way through the song.

You can see an example of this below.  Look at the right hand side of my notebook, and you will see the syllables I've counted out for today's poem.  (The title is underneath that napkin in the upper left hand corner.  No peeking!)

Notebook Draft - Click to Enlarge
Amy LV

Sometimes I sing the original song with syllable counts instead of the words.  The first stanza of this song would sound like this:

1-2-3.
1-2-3-4.
1-2-3-4.
1-2-3-4.
1-2-3.
1-2-3-4.
1-2-3.
1-2-3.

Originally, I wrote today's verse out with these line breaks, to match what you see above in the handwritten draft.  See how the syllables in each line match what you see in my notebook and in the numbers I just wrote.


Sometimes, though, line breaks can be heard differently.  I looked up today's song, and I found that the lines actually break in a different way than I originally heard them, in the way you see below.  There are the same number of syllables as you see in my handwritten and longer version above, but this version has fewer, longer lines.  Check out the comparison.  Same numbers but different line breaks.

SYLLABLES I DECIDED UPON (Final Poem - Up Top)

1-2-3-4-5-6-7.
1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8.
1-2-3-4-5-6-7.
1-2-3-4-5-6.

MY FIRST DRAFT SYLLABLES (Longer Version - Just Above)

1-2-3.
1-2-3-4.
1-2-3-4.
1-2-3-4.
1-2-3.
1-2-3-4.
1-2-3.
1-2-3.

As poem writers, we always decide not only how we want our poems to sound, but also how we want our poems to look.  In this poemsong, I prefer the longer, fewer lines.  But often I try the same words a few different ways to see what feels, what looks best.

Can you sing the song yet?  If not, go to the matching form or sidebar song list and count out the syllables in the first few lines of each song. What matches what I counted above?  I try to stay quite true to the numbers so that these songs are easily singable.  It is a bit like a math puzzle, isn't it?

Oh, and that cute kitty?  That's Wyoming.  We found her at a county fair this summer, lost and crying in a thicket and covered in fleas.  We brought her home all snuggled in my green fleece and within a few weeks, we found her a wonderful home with a lady whose beloved "Sammy" cat had just died.  It was a beautiful pairing.

Many of my poems are about cats, and sometimes I write about longing for pets.  We do love animals around here....  Meow!

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Wednesday, October 3, 2012

He's My Bud - Poems from Life & Books

Goldfish Backpack
by Amy LV


Click the arrow to hear me read this poem to you.

Students - When I was a little girl, my grandmother had a pet goldfish.  His (her?) name was Goldie, and he (she?) lived in a fish tank on Grandma's kitchen counter.  He (she?) got bigger and bigger and then stopped, just as they say fish do, depending on the size of the tank.

How did I get the idea for today's poem?  I have no idea!  But as I trace back in my mind, I think it may because last week, I read aloud Dan Yaccarino's THE BIRTHDAY FISH, an adorable book which includes a picture of a girl pulling her fish bowl in a wagon.  This picture must have stayed with me.  That and Goldie, of course.  I often pretend to know what other creatures are thinking...and goldfish probably do want to travel a bit more.  Don't you think?


If you are not sure what to write about today, you might want to read a picture book or a magazine first.  What picture strikes you?  What does it make you think and wonder?  Just start writing, and see what happens.  You might surprise yourself.  I did.

Almost every line in this poem has eight syllables.  But there are four lines with only seven syllables. Can you find them?  You may also notice that the last two lines are much shorter, really one line broken in two.. Sometimes it's neat to finish a poem like that, funneling it down to a slowed-down, short-line ending.

This week I am thrilled to have author Kate Messner visiting Sharing Our Notebooks.  If you are notebook keeper, you will want to visit here to peek inside her notebooks.  If you are a teacher and your class keeps notebooks, this site is growing to be quite full and useful!

Remember, it is Banned Books Week and also time to nominate books for the Cybils too!  Here you can see the poetry books that have already been nominated.

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Monday, February 13, 2012

February 13 & Tap-Tap-Tapping

 
Henry's Valentine Hearts & Scraps
Photo by Amy LV


Students - When I sat to type and reread and revise today's poem, our daughter Georgia came to ask me a question. I said, "Just a minute...I have to finish something." Then she watched (and listened) as I drummed my right hand fingers quickly and quietly on the desk.

When finished, I looked up at Georgia and said, "Yes?"

"What were you doing?" she asked.

"Counting syllables in each line," I said, proceeding to tap again. I showed her how every line in this poem has eight syllables, except for line six, which only has seven syllables.

Yes, poets do count! Try this with a rhyming poem you like. Count and see if there is a pattern to the beats. You may notice a pattern to the rhymes as well. In "February 13," each group of four lines ends with a different rhyme:  -OO,     -ACE, and -ISS

There is still time to make a valentine for your family, friend, or crush! Try a woven heart basket, as in the photo above, or sewn paper hearts like the ones below...or maybe a heart snowflake like the one you see at the bottom of this post.

Gigi's Valentines
Photo by Amy LV

Here's another crush poem!

Happy Valentine's Day to you and yours!

Hope's Heart Snowflake
Photo by Amy LV

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