Showing posts with label Tioughnioga Riverside Academy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tioughnioga Riverside Academy. Show all posts

Friday, June 9, 2023

For Teachers...and Welcome Guests!

Last Day of School
by Amy LV

Students - In the United States in mid-June, many schools are out for summer vacation, and many of the others are on their way to summer vacation very soon. So, this poem is an occasional poem, or a poem written for a special occasion - the end of school. It is also a poem of address, as in a poem written to someone particular, in this case, a special teacher.

I am very lucky to have learned from many wonderful teachers including but in no way limited to my mom, my grandmother (both taught fourth grade!), Mrs. Dufty, Mr. Fron, Mrs. Brooks, Mr. Walsh, Professor Valerie Bang-Jensen, Professor O'Brien, Professor Kennison, Professor Pliner, Lee Bennett Hopkins, and so many of the teachers I meet and authors of books I read every day. Moving from one class or grade to another can leave that bitter (so sad to leave) sweet (yay, new adventures) feeling in my mouth every time.

While this poem is not a ghazal, the form was definintely inspired by the ghazals I recently read and reread by Laura Purdie SalasLiz Garton Scanlon, and Mary Lee Hahn. I highly recommend that you check them out. In this poem of mine, notice the repetition of the -eer sound and also the repetition of the whole word together

Today, and this summer, one writing recommendation I have for you is this: write a poem for a special occasion. And...or...write a poem especially FOR someone else. If you like, play around with some repetition, either by repeating one sound over and over...or coming around and around to the same word.

And now, happy guest news!

Today I am fortunate and excited to again welcome friends from Tioughnioga Riverside Academy in Whitney Point, NY. Hello and many thank yous to Intermediate Literacy Coordinator Dr. Kristie Miner, Fifth Grade Teachers Mrs. Clark, Mrs. Kraly, and Mrs. Vandermark and the Fifth Grade Poets of TRA.

These writers took on a 24 HOURS project, each writing a poem in the voice of their school, all the way through one night and one day. Look closely at that first slide and the fabulous way the authors displayed their work all around a large clock face!

Read these delightful poems to meet some of the school's characters, listen to sounds, notice similes and careful repetition. Pay attention to the different feelings in each poem and how the line breaks help you feel those feelings. This slideshow reads like a book that I would love to check out from the library.

Click the three dots and ENTER FULL SCREEN to enlarge.

Thank you again, poets! I feel like we just took a secret field trip, absorbing the sights and sounds and smells of Tioughnioga Riverside Academy. Your school will miss your voices and your footsteps  and will think about you in the summer days (and nights!) ahead. Readers, please if you would, take a moment to comment on this delightful book in slides.

Buffy is hosting this week's Poetry Friday roundup and two camoflauge photographs and poems over at Buffy Silverman. Each Friday, all are invited to share poems, poem books, poetry ideas, and friendship in this open and welcoming poetry community.

And young writer friends, please know that I will be here for most Fridays of the summer. I plan to spend lots of time writing in my little shed named Gratitude (tour next fall) and also look forward to lots of fruit picking, sock knitting, flower photographing, and craziest of all, a Giant Puppet Making workshop at Touchstone Center for Crafts in Farmington, Pennysylvania.

xo,

Amy

Please share a comment below if you wish.
Know that your comment will only appear after I approve it.
If you are under 13 years old, please only comment 
with a parent or as part of a group with your teacher.

Friday, June 2, 2023

Lean on a Song & Welcome Guests

Sky After Poeming
Photo by Amy LV



Students - Can you believe that I took the above sky photograph just moments after writing this poem? Well, I did! This week has been so beautiful, so summery in Western New York.

Today's poem leans on the meter of the 1936 song "Dona Nobis Pacem" ("Grant Us Peace" in Latin). If you listen to the recording above, you will hear me read the poem and then sing it to the tune of the song. "Dona Nobis Pacem" lives in my mind this week as I have just joined a newly formed threshold choir (Raven's Call) here in Buffalo, NY, a small choir that will sing at the bedsides of seriously ill and dying people who wish for music. This is but one of the songs we are learning, and I am singing it to myself inside and outside.

I do like to think that this is a true equation: topic + structure + wordplay = poem. Sometimes I begin with a topic, sometimes a structure, sometimes some wordplay. Today, structure (the meter of "Dona Nobis Pacem") guided my way. This and my recent thoughts about how we speak to ourselves in our own minds. 

I've suggested this several times before, but here it is again. If you're not sure where to begin with a poem, choose a song you like and then write words that can fit in the lines perfectly (or well enough!) I like to count the syllables and then match syllables and stresses as perfectly as feels right.

HERE is a beautiful voice and piano recording of "Dona Nobis Pacem," a round that is often sung in three parts, here all sung by Julie Gaulke.

And NOW....is a happy honor to welcome Fourth Grade Teacher Cheryl Donnelly and her poets from Tioughnioga Riverside Academy in Whitney Point, NY who took on the April 24 HOURS Challenge. My goodness gracious! How this school takes poetry on. I was lucky enough to visit these writers in mid-May, and feel grateful to them and to Teacher Cheryl Donnelly and Intermediate Literacy Coordinator Dr. Kristie Miner for all of their joyful sharing.

Enjoy this joyful slideshow of poems, one poem from each poet, and know that each poet wrote many poems as part of their own 24 HOURS project, choosing a favorite for us here at The Poem Farm. Do take notice of the many different voices and poetic techniques these writers chose.

Click the three dots and ENTER FULL SCREEN to enlarge.

Thank you again to this poetic community from Tioughnioga Riverside Academy for joining us today.

Tricia is hosting this week's Poetry Friday roundup at The Miss Rumphius Effect. Each Friday, all are invited to share poems, poem books, poetry ideas, and friendship in this open and welcoming poetry community.

xo,

Amy

Please share a comment below if you wish.
Know that your comment will only appear after I approve it.
If you are under 13 years old, please only comment 
with a parent or as part of a group with your teacher.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Poetry Friday, Peek, & Circular Poems!




Today I am excited to welcome fourth graders from the class of teacher Ken Hand and Intermediate Literacy Coordinator Kristie Miner.  They join us from Tioughnioga Riverside Academy in the Whitney Point Central School District in Whitney Point, NY.

Room 203 Students - Tioughnioga Riverside Academy

But first...a quick poem lesson.

Over the past week, I have been revisiting last year's project in which I wrote and posted a new children's poem each day.  For each remaining day of April, I will continue to do so, with a particular focus each day.

Circular Poems

At times, it is difficult to know how to end a poem, so the words end up hanging out in space.  One way to tie things up at the conclusion of a story or poem is to go back to the beginning.  Writers call this "a circular ending" or "going out the same door you came in."  

Sometimes such an ending repeats exactly the same words, and sometimes there is merely a hint of the beginning in the ending, along with something new.  Not sure how to end a piece?  Check to see if you might find a thread to pick up way back in your first line or two.

Here are a few poems from this year, all with circular endings.  What poems or stories do you know with circular endings?  Try writing one sometime.  (I like this type of ending so much that sometimes I must make myself do something different!)
 
from December 2010


 from May 2010

from February 2011


from June 2010


And now...our Poetry Peek!  Welcome to teacher Ken Hand and Intermediate Literacy Coordinator Kristie Miner.  Below, Kristie explains their classroom publishing station.

All year, students in Room 203 at Tioughnioga Riverside Academy have filled the pages of their writers' notebooks with words and illustrations grown from their own ideas and through the inspiration of others.  The discovery of children's publishing links found at The Poem Farm opened students' eyes to the possibility of sharing their work with a much larger audience.

One thing led to another, and soon we had a publishing station up and running in our classroom.  We filled it with all of the resources needed to polish and publish -- mentor texts, poetry anthologies, samples of published work, submission guidelines, contact information, envelopes, publishing paper, pens, markers, crayons, watercolors, and colored pencils.

A Wall of Publishing Possibilities
Photo by Kristie Miner

Baskets Full of Writing Supplies & Mentor Texts
Photo by Kristie Miner

Students have caught the publishing bug, dreaming big, letting their talent and hard work lead the way.

 Tara & Erin Compose Writing & Art
Photo by Kristie Miner

Wonderholic
by Tara
My dream as a writer is to have someone recognize the potential of my writing and that I'm not just a girl who wrote something smart.  I'm a girl who has guts!

Football
by Connor
My dream is to get my poem published in the magazine STONE SOUP.  I hope I get a lot more of my poems published.

Alex Illustrating
Photo by Kristie Miner

Leaves
by Leih
My hopes and dreams of my future poem writing are to get really good and then have my own website (like The Poem Farm).  Once I know that publishing is what I want to do, I will then write an anthology of some of my best poems.  I'll send my draft to an editor, then when I get the changes back, I will get my finished copy done and sent out.  In no time, hopefully I'll have my anthology in stores.  Then I hope to become a big poem writer.  I draw my pictures with words.

Much gratitude and warmth to these students and their teachers for sharing their beautiful work, exciting publishing station, and writing spirit with us on this Poetry Friday!  Please write and let us know if you try some of their ideas.

This Month's Poetry Revisits and Lessons So Far

April 2 - Imagery
April 6 - Free Verse
April 8 - Today - Circular Poems

Teachers - if your students write poetry from any of this month's online lessons and are inspired to share, please let me know.  With permission, I'd love to host their work here in May!

Visit Madigan at Madigan Reads for the complete Poetry Friday roundup in all its glory!

(Please click on POST A COMMENT below to share a thought.)