Showing posts with label Informational Poems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Informational Poems. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Happy Blog Birthday...and Happy Almost Poetry Month!

The Poem Farm is Six!
Photo by Amy LV




Happy birthday to this funny space...The Poem Farm!  Today my blog turns six years old, and I could not be more thankful to everyone who stops by to read once in a while.  When I began this project back in 2010 (my first post included a spring poem), it was just to get writing more frequently, just for me.  I didn't know about Poetry Friday or about the Kidlitosphere, but now I do.  I didn't know that I could write hundreds of (not all good) poems over a few years, but now I do.  I didn't know that a person could make a whole world of beautiful friends through an online window.  But now I do.

I started writing here for me, but I kept going because I knew that there was one person, somewhere, who checked in here and there.  It meant - and still means - a lot to me.  Thank you.

In honor of all who have read and shared so generously here at The Poem Farm over the past six years, I will donate 15 copies of my new EVERY DAY BIRDS (10 hardcover English and 5 softcover bilingual English/Spanish) to Books for Kids.  I'll drop those off on Thursday at the East Aurora Public Library.

Birthday Gifts
Photo by Amy LV

In more happy news, the 20th anniversary of National Poetry Month is upon us! Started by the Academy of American Poets in 1996, this month-long celebration of all things poem makes spring even more beautiful. You can learn more about ways to celebrate National Poetry Month at poets.org.  This logo below comes from the poets.org site, a treasure trove of poetry goodness.


Before we talk about this year's Poetry Month project at The Poem Farm, let's go back in time.  Some of you may recall Poem Farm projects from other years.  Here's a bit of time travel through the past few Poetry Months at The Poem Farm.

2010 - The Poem Farm Begins!  I wrote a poem each day for a month, beginning actually, on March 29, 2010. This blog just to be a one month project, just for me, to get me writing again as I awaited the publication of FOREST HAS A SONG.  At the end of April 2010, I was having too much fun to stop, decided to go for one whole year, publishing a poem at The Poem Farm each day.  After that, I still hung around!

2011 - For each day of April 2011, I continued to write and share poems.  However, I had no theme as the blog was just entering its second year.

2012 - A-Z Dictionary Hike - Here's where the themes began.  Each day of April 2012, I opened my children's dictionary to a different letter, starting with A, ending with Z.  Eyes closed, I pointed to a word and this word became the title of that day's poem.

2013 - Drawing into Poems - For each day of April 2013, I slowed myself down and looked closely at an object, drawing it with black pen into my notebook. On some days, I wrote poems from these drawings, but on many days, I simply allowed the looking-drawing practice to practice becoming a closer observer.

2014 - Thrift Store - For each day of April 2014, I wrote a poem from a photograph of an item I found in a thrift store.  These poems are no longer at The Poem Farm as I am trying to sell them as a collection.

2015 - Sing That Poem - For each day of April 2015, I wrote a poem to the meter of a well-known tune and challenged readers to match the poem to the tune by seeing if it was singable to the same meter.

And now, for this year's project!


2016 - Wallow in Wonder - For my 2016 National Poetry Month project, I will celebrate learning and writing from learning, writing poems from each daily Wonder at Wonderopolis.  As I did with the Dictionary Hike in 2012, I am looking to surprise myself with a new inspiration daily.  This year, such inspiration will show up in my inbox each morning.  I will print it and carry each Wonder around all day...and in the afternoon or evening, I will write and post the poem for the next day.

Some of you may know that I am smitten with Wonderopolis and have written from W posts many a time. In fact, I wrote this poem for those wondering folks back in 2013.


There are few things better than learning something new.  And so this year, for National Poetry Month, I am committed to grow my own brain, writing from these ideas just as I learn, and sharing here day-by-day.  Too, I invite anyone who wishes to play along.  To do so, simply read daily at Wonderopolis and write a poem from any or each day's Wonder.  

I will not be able to share too many poems in this space, but if you wish to leave links in the comments to your own Wonder poems, I will try to link to some as I am able, and I may write to ask your permission to share a poem in this blog space.  Wonder Lead Paul Hankins, secondary teacher extraordinaire and blogger at WonderGround and at These 4 Corners will be joining this challenge too, blogging his poems at his new Wonder Ground blog.

I will begin writing my April poems from informational wonders on March 31, reading Thursday's Wonder at Wonderopolis, thinking all day long about the poem, and then posting to begin National Poetry Month here at The Poem Farm, where I will happily host Poetry Friday as well.  

What will we learn?  I wonder...

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Friday, March 28, 2014

Octopus - Poems of Address & School Visit



Oh, Octopus!
by Amy LV




Students - The idea for this poem came from a student at Eggert Elementary School in Orchard Park, NY.  I was teaching a writing workshop for upper grade students, and one student drew the nest from my writing pot.

Writing Pot
Photo by Brian Muffoletto

On the back of the nest were written the words FABULOUS FACT.  This meant that we were all to think of a favorite fact and let this fact inspire a poem or snip of writing.  One girl shared the fact that octopuses have three hearts, something I never knew.  This fact stuck in my brain, and this morning inspired today's verse to an octopus.  You'll see many facts about octopuses in this poem, and a little twist at the end. 

It is interesting to write poems of address, or poems that speak TO something. This might be an angle you wish to try with a topic.  Instead of writing ABOUT something, speak to it, as if it were right there with you. What would you say? And if you wish for it to answer, simply begin a new stanza and write a conversation poem.

On both Wednesday and Thursday of this week, I had the good fortune to visit Eggert Elementary for a big old poetry celebration.  Thank you many times over to principal Terry Tryon, the Eggert PTO, to teacher Brian Muffoletto and Tara Zimmerman, to parent Karen Nuwer, to art teacher Wendy Johnson and music teacher Rachelle Francis and to all of the teachers and students for making this a very magical visit.

I cannot recommend highly enough the beautiful song, "Birch are Soprano" by Dan Berggren, on his album TONGUES IN TREES.  My Wednesday morning began with a sneak listen to the Eggert chorus, who will be performing the first choral version of this song.  If FOREST HAS A SONG were a movie, I would hope for this song be the soundtrack.

Good choice!

Then, I feasted on expansive and amazing hallway displays of a variety of poems - by children and by me too.  Words and artwork everywhere. Students wrote poems on leaves, on animal silhouettes, and art teacher Wendy Johnson blew up pictures from FOREST and anthologies with my poems and invited children to make owls, flowers, and other beautiful art.

Teacher Brian Muffoletto filled the display case with my poem, "Kindness."  

Front Display Case
Photo by Amy LV
Squirrel Poet
Photo by Amy LV

Brian and teacher Tara Zimmerman made this enormous poetree!

Large Poetree with Students' Poems
Photo by Amy LV

FOREST and Me
Photo by Brian Muffoletto

Chickadee & Beautiful Birds
Photo by Amy LV

Poems on Silhouettes
Photo by Amy LV

The nurse and I had our photo taken by this big louse.

BIG Louse!  
Photo by Amy LV


Wow!  Thank you again to all all all of Eggert Elementary for such a wonderful two day visit.

Next Tuesday is April 1, April Fools Day, and the beginning of National Poetry Month.  This year I will not be taking a Dictionary Hike (2012) or Drawing Into Poems. Rather, I will write a whole collection of poem drafts, one each day of the month, live, for a new manuscript titled THRIFT STORE.  I'll share notes about process, drafts, audio, and pictures.  By the of the month, I hope to have a collection worth revising, and I invite you to watch me work.  I think I'll call it THRIFT STORE LIVE.

If you have not visited Sharing Our Notebooks lately, this week I am so happy to have Mary Poindexter McLaughlin with a story and her notebook-celebrating poem, "The Book."  Visit to enjoy this tribute to notebooks, and comment to be entered into the Post-It note giveaway!  Next week I will welcome notebook keeper Alex McCarron into this space.

Today's Poetry Friday celebration is over at A Year of Reading with Mary Lee Hahn.  Visit her wonderful place for all kinds of poetry goodness as we get ready for April, National Poetry Month!

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Friday, March 14, 2014

It's Pi Day! Celebrate 3.14159.........

Hotel Room Circles
Photo by Amy LV




Students - Today is Pi Day!  On March 14, today, people the world over celebrate the amazing number that is Pi.  Last year on this day, thanks to the enthusiasm of her wonderful math teacher, our daughter Georgia memorized Pi out to one hundred places.  That was amazing, and so now I will celebrate Pi Day in my head and heart every year.

You can learn more about Pi here at Pi Day or here at Wonderopolis.  You can learn more about calculating Pi here at wikiHow.  Happy Pi Day!  Go eat pie.

This week I have had the pleasure of visiting Jone MacCulloch's blog, Check it Out.  On Wednesday, we had a chat about FOREST HAS A SONG, and today Jone is graciously sharing my poem, "Sound Waves", from the new POETRY FRIDAY ANTHOLOGY FOR SCIENCE: THIRD GRADE STUDENT EDITION, compiled by Sylvia Vardell and Janet Wong.

Jamie Palmer is sharing a fantabulous list of notebook resources over at my other blog, Sharing Our Notebooks, this week.  Stop by to learn about some new books and to enter the giveaway! 

Much gratitude to Kristie Miner and the Binghamton Area Reading Council for such a lovely evening last night at Traditions at the Glen. It was simply a pleasure to share poetry with and write with such warm and wonderful teachers.

Book Display
Photo by Amy LV

Kristie and Amy
Photo by ?

Beautiful Tables
Photo by Amy LV

Happy Poetry Pi-Day!

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Monday, June 3, 2013

Female Praying Mantises and Truth

Praying Mantis
by Amy LV


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

Students - I have no idea why I wrote the phrase - Praying mantis prays for life - in my notebook the other evening.  But I did.  And then the other lines followed.  In the morning, however, I knew that I needed to do some research.  I wondered, "Is it really true what I've heard?  Do the female mantises REALLY eat the males after mating?"  So I did a bit of reading, and I found out that while this does happen, it is not as frequent as I had imagined.

When a female mantis is hungry, she may eat the male after mating, but usually she does not. This is more likely to happen in captivity, and it is more likely when the female is hungry.  When a praying mantis female does eat a male after mating, he unwittingly sacrifices his life for her health and the health of her eggs.

The title of this poem serves as a warning.  Just as we should not grocery shop when we are hungry (we will buy too much), a male praying mantis should not woo a female praying mantis who is hungry (she may devour him).

Research is important in all genres of writing.  It would be terrible if my poem made all female praying mantises out to be killers.  They are not!  Truth matters, and writers must be responsible to the truth.

Please share a comment below if you wish.
To find a poem by topic, click here. To find a poem by technique, click here.
Like The Poem Farm on Facebook for more poems, articles, and poemquotes!

Monday, February 11, 2013

Feathery Eyes - A Love Poem

My Peacock Sweater
Photo by Amy LV




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

Students - I love writing about animals.  You may have noticed this before, and you will surely notice it again.  Sometimes when I drive our children to school, we have to slow the car waaaay down.  Why?  Well, along our route is a farm with many different types of birds, including peacocks.  Some days they are sitting on the porch rail, and some days the male is standing in the sunshine with his tail all fanned out.

I wrote this poem from a few interesting facts about peacocks.  I find it a fun challenge to take a handful of facts, toss them up into the sky, and see if they land as a poem!  (This actually never happens.  Every time, I have to arrange and rearrange and play and play until the poem sounds just the way I like when I read it out loud.)  My favorite part of this poem is the end, when they eyes welcome the babies.

Update:  Later this afternoon, I checked my e-mail to find this wonderful message, below, from Nancy.  Do follow the link to see this beautiful artwork, and consider trying this exercise yourself.  I know that I will.

When I read your poem this morning I was reminded of the paintings of a very special artist - Father Paul Plante.  I think you'll appreciate his work.  Last year I had my 4th graders pick a painting and find the poetry in the painting.  Using their observation skills they were able to look "eye to eye" with the painting.  

Today's poem is, in a way, a Valentine poem.  Happy Valentine's Day to you and all of those you love!

If you have not yet gotten your hands on THE NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC BOOK OF ANIMAL POETRY, edited by Children's Poet Laureate J. Patrick Lewis and written by many of your favorite poets past and present...do find it as soon as you can.  This beautiful book just won The Claudia Lewis Award.  Congratulations to Pat and to all!


Please share a comment below if you wish.
To find a poem by topic, click here. To find a poem by technique, click here.
Like The Poem Farm on Facebook for more poems, articles, and poemquotes!