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

Friday, April 17, 2015

Day 17 - National Poetry Month 2015 - Sing That Poem!


Happy National Poetry Month!
Welcome to Day 17 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 Memories.  Here is the tune that goes along with it, below. Did you figure it out?



Margaret Simon's students from Caneview Elementary in New Iberia, Louisiana, have done it again!  You can listen to their strong voices singing about that old barn.  Thank you, singers!



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.

Freedom
by Amy LV


Students - Today's poem does not have much of a story behind it other than it began with some notebook writing.  I knew which tune I would write to because I knew that we were lucky enough to have guests with the same tune here today. But which topic should I choose?

I wrote about a few ideas in my notebook, and some were too silly for today's rhythm and song.  I adore this tune, and I wanted to write something worthy of it.  I hope I did.

Today we have a special Poetry Peek from Joy Keller's fourth grade poets Brooks Hill Elementary in the Fairport Central School District in Fairport, NY.  These students have been researching oceans, and they used their research to write a class song...to the same tune as my song for today.  

Taking information and restructuring it into the rhythms and lines of a poemsong is a complex task, and these writers did a beautiful job here. This might be something that other classes wish to try.  It's a glorious way to culminate a unit in science or social studies.  And when you read this poem (and tomorrow, listen to these students' singing voices), you will feel that you are in the sea. 

Thank you so much for sharing your song with us today, students.  It's a treat!  Welcome to teacher Joy Keller and her fourth graders.


We began by brainstorming a list of topics that had to do with the ocean (the water, fish, ocean mammals, etc.), and then the kids grouped themselves based on which topic they wanted to write about. Each group wrote a stanza. We talked about syllables and emphasis, but most of them just felt when they got it right by repeatedly singing it! We finished with a discussion about the order in which to put the stanzas and--voila!--we had our poem.

I think the trickiest part was that everyone kept singing the tune of "You are My Sunshine" instead of today's secret tune so that we messed ourselves up. I asked my musician husband why this was happening, and he gave me the very technical answer of "They're kinda alike at the beginning." :)


The Ocean
by Mrs. Keller’s Fourth Graders

The ocean’s turquoise, with bubbles floating,
There’s emerald seaweed, with ruby coral.
With pearls in clams and some diamond seashells,
Barnacles cling to opal rocks.

From the sunlight zone down to the twilight zone down
To the midnight zone down to the abyss,
From the abyss down into the trenches,
Those are the levels of the sea.

There are the mammals that live in oceans,
They have to come up for a breath of fresh air.
The whales have blowholes that spurt out water
Dolphins and seals will splash and play.

Fish breathe through their gills, and swim in schools,
And they have scales, and they have fins.
Sharks have sharp teeth, and the sailfish swim fast.
Tripod fish even walk around.

Deep in the ocean, strange fish are glowing.
Most fish down there have bioluminescence.
Bioluminescence is like a bright light bulb—
That’s what helps fish to catch their prey.

Invertebrates live down in the ocean.
They don’t have backbones, but some have hard shells
Like jellyfish and lobsters and crabs and
Octopi squirting out black ink.

Don’t throw your garbage into the ocean
You’ll hurt the fish and you’ll cloud the water.
The dirty bottles and destructive poisons
Can really ruin our gorgeous seas.

Robyn is hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup over at Life on the Deckle Edge. Have fun feasting on the poems all day, all week long!

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Day 4 - National Poetry Month 2015 - Sing That Poem!

Happy National Poetry Month!
Welcome to Day 4 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 At Night.  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.

Friends Share Everything
by Amy LV


Students - So far, this month's project has me thinking in a whole different way than usual: meter first and then content second.  So as you can see today, sometimes the content is a bit wacky!  Revision is pretty easy, and probably funny to listen to - revision sounds like me humming away.

It took me quite a while to write today's silly verse, and it is silly...and untrue...mostly. I do not have two cockroaches in my shoe.  However, cockroaches are more friendly than most folks realize.  You can read a little bit about that below, or click over to the BBC Nature article for even more on this subject.

by Matt Walker, BBC Nature

Yesterday I hosted Poetry Friday here, and there are all kinds of wonderful poetry links to explore.  And don't forget - over at Jama's Alphabet Soup, Jama is keeping a list of poetry projects 'round the Kidlitosphere all month long.  So much poetry happiness!

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.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Elf Owl and Second Grade Gifts

Happy greetings from All Write!!! Summer Institute 2013.  It has been wonderful to be in Warsaw, Indiana, celebrating reading and writing with so many new and old friends.  I was so excited to be here that I got my days confused and actually posted early, by accident! Happy Poetry Every Day!


Elf Owl
by Amy LV


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

Students - Elf owls are very small birds, about the size of sparrows.  They are desert birds who live in saguaro cacti in the southwestern parts of the United States and in Mexico.  For today's poem, I pretended to be an elf owl and to speak as an elf owl.  Learning new facts and spinning them into poems is one of the most joyful parts of my life.  You will easily find the repeating line...and maybe you will notice what is perhaps my most-proud-rhyme ever!

This spring, I had the good fortune to Skype with Barbara Lehn's second grade class from Willard Elementary in Concord, Massachusetts.  After we talked poetry and visited (even some pets) through our computers, the students burst into a flurry of writing their own poems.  I was very lucky to receive a whole envelope full of notes and poems which I am pleased to share with you for today's Poetry Peek.  Simply click the poems to enlarge them.

by Anna













I would like to say many thank you hugs to Barbara Lehn and her class full of poets and readers.  I very much enjoyed my first-ever-Skype ever with them, and one of these young poets, Matilda, expresses my gratitude best -

by Matilda

May you all enjoy the many gifts of poetry all summer long...and throughout your lives.

It's still not too late to register for Kate Messner's Teachers Write! free online summer writing camp.  I'll be visiting for a session, as will many other authors, and it's a wonderful way to get back writing in community and in your own home at the same time.  Kate Messner offers many gifts to the Kidlitosphere, and it was her Kid-Lit Cares: Superstorm Sandy Relief Effort that connected Barbara Lehn's class and me through educator, author, and mother Linda Booth Sweeney. Linda bid on my books and Skype visit, and I'm so glad she did.  Thank you!

This week at Sharing Our Notebooks, I am so happy to have my friend Emily Krempholtz generously offering a look into many of her notebooks, past and present.  This blot has been a bit fallow of late, and I could not be more grateful than to have Emily bring it back to life. Please stop by and get re-notebook-inspired and enter Emily's giveaway too!

If you happened to miss Monday's post, please visit it if you'd like to learn about Professor Cathryn Smith's poetry pole, a wonderful thing indeed!

Today Carol is hosting Poetry Friday today at Carol's Corner.  Visit to discover a variety of poetic picture books and find a multitude of links to all poetry goodness in the Kidlitosphere today.  Next week, I will host the festivities here and hope to see you back.

In the meantime, here is a writing technique for you to try, from second grader Caroline!

by Caroline

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, 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!

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Poem #294 Tickles Us With Whiskers


Won't Fit!
by Amy LV


Students - did you know that a cat's whiskers have several purposes?  Whiskers help cats in many ways, most importantly in understanding whether they will fit through small spaces.  Because cats' whiskers are about the width of the widest part of their bodies, testing an opening with whiskers will help a cat know if s/he can make it through.  

I do not know why I wrote this poem.  If I did, I'd tell you.  But sitting on my couch last night, I began a poem titled, "blah."  It was going to use the word "blah" many times, in meter.  Then I began a poem about writing in loopy cursive.  Then our dog Cali came over for a little snuggle.  Snuggling her got me to looking at her whiskers which led to thinking about cat whiskers which led to wondering why cats have whiskers which led to this poem.

It's strange and fascinating to see the road trips our minds will take us on when we travel without a map.  If you have a story about following one thought to another through writing, please share it with me in the comments.

In case you were wondering, I did type the word whiskers in that spaced-out way to mimic the spacing of real cat whiskers.

You can learn more about the importance of cat whiskers at HowStuffWorks.

(Please click on COMMENTS below to share a thought.)

Monday, December 6, 2010

Final Poem of NF Week - Mouse - #251


Outside the Birdhouse 
Photo by Henry LV

Inside the Birdhouse (Deer Mouse Nest)
Photo by Henry LV


This is #7 and the final poem in this week's nonfiction challenge in which I wrote a poem based on my own nonfiction reading that day.  

Students - Today's poem came from a funny place.  For a long time, our ten-year-old daughter Georgia's camera has been missing.  It was not her fault; it was my fault.  I borrowed it, and then I put it somewhere in my very messy study.  I knew it was in here somewhere but was too frightened of the piles to even look.

Well, yesterday I began overhauling my study.  It's getting very cold and snowy 'round these parts, and I want our bunnies to take turns visiting and working beside me in my study.  They live in outdoor hutches, and they're cozy in their fur, but the hopping will be good for them...and the company will be good for me.  However, for obvious reasons, one cannot have a "study bunny" if there are piles of books and papers all over the floor.  Anyway, to make a short story long, I found the camera in the midst of the cleaning.

"But how does this connect to today's poem?" you ask.  We found the camera, and the children went through the saved photographs, remembering neat ones they'd taken in the summer before Mommy lost the camera.  Henry took these two photographs of a birdhouse and the deer mouse nest inside.  As soon as I saw his photos, I knew what the focus of today's poem would be, and I found a new idea-finding technique: look at a photo...wonder...find facts...write!

Since I did not know any interesting facts about deer mice before yesterday, I read all about them at the New Mexico Game and Fish site, Pestworld for Kids (who decides which animals are pests anyway?), and SUNY ESF.  I was amazed by how many facts there were.  There were so many, in fact, that I needed to make little notes to myself.  I took my blank sheet of paper and drew a line down the middle, creating two columns.  In the right hand column, I wrote the heading FACTS.  I left the left hand side blank for the poem.  This way, while writing the poem, I could look over at the fact column to see what I still needed to include.

The funniest-worded fact about deer mice I found was on the New Mexico Game and Fish site: "Deer mice are the snack food of the predator world."   Deer mice would probably not find this funny at all.

For a thoughtful and classic mouse poem, read Robert Burns's poem "To a Mouse", here, and then listen to it and watch the perfect pictures here.

I am still thinking about Nonfiction Week.  Just like Free Verse Week #1 & #2, this week stretched me to think about poetry in new ways, to experiment with form and teaching at the same time, to find interesting (yet not distracting) facts.  It was not easy, but I liked it and may well do it again.  As always, please do let me know if you try it too.  I would love to share a class's work around writing nonfiction poetry.

Today you will notice that Mark has helped me by adding all of these different share buttons. Thank you to Mark!  And I thank you in advance should you choose to share this post, or any post, in any way!

(Please click on COMMENTS below to share a thought.)

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Nonfiction Week Brings Bowerbirds - #249


 Draft
by Amy LV


This is poem #5 in this week's nonfiction challenge.  Thank you to Jeannine Atkins for suggesting that I "stroll through more NATIONAL GEOGRAPHICS."  I took her advice last night, moseying through a fascinating article about bowerbirds in the July 2010 issue.  Did you know that besides humans, the bowerbird is the only animal to kill another animal for decorating purposes?

I first read about bowerbirds in this great book.   


Students - sometimes it is wise to be open to listening to others' ideas about writing.  I don't mean that we should expect assignments and continually ask, "What should I write?"  But there are times when someone notices something in your work, times when a person makes a little hint that s/he would like to read more of something you have already tried.  Maybe a friend or family member or teacher knows you well enough to imagine something you might enjoy writing or be show promise writing.  That person may realize it before you do.

Parents and teachers - Today I am pleased to invite you to Here in the Bonny Glen, a beautiful, thoughtful, and enchanting homeschooling and literacy blog by Melissa Wiley.  Among other books, Melissa is the author of both the Charlotte and Martha years books, stories about Laura Ingalls Wilder's great-grandmother and grandmother. This season she shares her Gift Ideas Roundup, and there are so many wonderful ideas for all of us.  I had the chance to meet Melissa at KidLit Con this fall, and it felt like we'd known each other forever.  Enjoy her blog...I sure do.

(Please click on COMMENTS below to share a thought.)

Friday, December 3, 2010

Poetry Friday, Poetry Notable Peek, & #248




This is #27 in a Friday series of poems about poems.  It is also #4 in this week's nonfiction challenge to write a nonfiction poem each day.  To write today's poem, I did a bit of reading about the history of poetry.  I visited Wikipedia, and poetry.com to help me think about all of the many purposes of poetry throughout time.  Did you know that people recited and sang poems long before they wrote poems?  Did you know that long ago, poems helped people to remember things such as law and history?  Did you know that rhythm and rhyme helped people to hold onto such important facts?

I did not plan to write one huge list, but with my rhyming dictionary at my side, those ize words just flowed like water.  And so it went.

Two weeks ago, I had the opportunity to hear the NCTE Excellence in Poetry Award committee share some of their favorite poetry books from 2010.  Chances are that these books will make this year's list of poetry notables to be published in the July 2011 edition of LANGUAGE ARTS.  So today's post is a "sneak peek" of sorts.

Many thanks to Barbara Ward, chair of the NCTE Excellence Poetry Award Committee, for generously sharing her thoughts about how this committee will select between ten and twenty notable poetry titles for 2010.  Welcome to Barbara!

Our NCTE committee consists of Rebecca Kai Dotlich (Poet), Jonda C. McNair (Clemson University), Elaine Magliaro (retired teacher and blogger), Mary Napoli (Penn State), Terrell Young (Washington State), and me, Barbara Ward (Washington State).

For our selection process, we contact publishers and solicit books of poetry as well as reading poetry on our own.  We examine the whole package -- poems and illustrations -- and individual poems, asking ourselves questions such as: Is the content interesting and understandable by young readers?  Is the language innovative with careful word choice and use of poetic devices that enhance meaning?  Does the form or structure help readers understand the subject?

If we are looking at collections or anthologies, we consider the purposeful selection of quality poetry, logical arrangement, the inclusion of a range of poetry.

We savor illustrations that complement and extend the prose but don't overwhelm the poems.  The illustrations should also support the poems' tone and inspire a second look.

Above all, since our tastes differ, each of us looks for poems that speak to us in some way or that speak to the children and teens with which we work.  We look for originality in form, subject, and point of view, and I certainly look for poems that can easily be incorporated into the classroom.  I think all of the members of the committee look for poems or poetry books that are fun to read aloud and broaden the perception others have about poetry.  While we honor the poetry that our grandparents and parents loved, we also look to honor the poems and poets who speak to today's readers and writers.

These books represent some of this year's committee favorites.




Rebecca Kai Dotlich, poet and panel member, says, "It was and is my honor and pleasure to serve on a committee that highlights an excellent assortment of poetry books to be brought to the attention of poetry lovers.  What a delightful world of poetry we all have the honor of immersing ourselves in because of these poets and the poetry they imagine, scribble, revise, and toil over."

Thank you again to Barbara, to Rebecca, and to this whole panel for their service.

This NCTE committee also selected the 2011 NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children winner which you may well know is J. Patrick Lewis.  You can read more about this award as well as past recipients at Sylvia Vardell's Poetry for Children.  For an interview with J. Patrick Lewis and more celebration, visit NCTE committee member Elaine Magliaro's blog Wild Rose Reader.

I am adding three new additions to my right hand sidebar today.  One is for this season, highlighting great lists of gift book ideas for children, readers, and writers.  The second sidebar note will announce upcoming writing and/or poetry workshops which I think will be of interest to you.  Check out the Highlights retreat with poet Rebecca Kai Dotlich.  Having attended a workshop with Rebecca, I recommend this one highly.  And the third sidebar addition is poetry information for young people.  I will try to keep up on this, but if you hear of any contests or poetic news for children, please let me know.  There are two new additions there today -  a British poetry magazine for children and a pet poetry contest with a deadline of January 31, 2011.  So cuddle up with your cat or dog or potbellied pig, and get writing!

Tricia over at The Miss Rumphius Effect is hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup.  Have fun wallowing in all of those words.

(Please click COMMENTS below to share a thought.)