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Archive for the ‘Grades 6-8’ Category

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May 06

Poetry Pickings

After hearing Jim Holt on NPR one day, discussing his essay “Got Poetry?” where he makes the case for memorizing poetry, I was inspired to sign up for Poem-A-Day at poets.org. I may not get around to memorizing many poems, but I thought it would be useful as a teacher of writing (and a literate adult) to get more poetry into my daily reading. Some days the poem comes and I don’t feel very engaged - the poet’s message and my mood just aren’t jiving at that moment. But sometimes the poem arrives in my inbox and it sparks all kinds of images and ideas. More after the jump:

Today’s poem was Ode on Dictionaries by Barbara Hamby. And while the poem itself is not appropriate for children, there are snippets that could be shared to show how a poet loves words - devours them.

I’m building
my own book as a mason makes a wall or a gelding
runs round the track—brick by brick, step by step, word by word,
jonquil by gerrymander, syllabub by greensward,
swordplay by snapdragon, a never-ending parade
with clowns and funambulists in my own mouth, homemade
treasure chest of tongue and teeth, the brain’s roustabout, rough
unfurler of tents and trapezes, off-the-cuff
unruly troublemaker in the high church museum
of the world.

I like the idea of students keeping track of words they adore - whether because of how they sound or what they mean - and building a poem “brick by brick, word by word” with their favorite words they’ve found over time.

Apr 25

The Miss Rumphius Effect: Poetry Makers - Lisa Westberg Peters

Favorite quote on writing/poetry?
Lisa: Guindon, the cartoonist, said: Writing is nature’s way of letting you know how sloppy your thinking is.

via The Miss Rumphius Effect: Poetry Makers - Lisa Westberg Peters.

This is a great quote on writing shared by Lisa Westberg Peters in her interview on The Miss Rumphius Effect. What a nice way to help students think about their purpose in writing and how we can use writing to clarify our thinking.

Lisa Westberg Peters also shares some of her poems from

Earthshake: Poems From the Ground Up

and I sure wish I knew about them back when I was teaching my earth science unit in 3rd grade! Great poetry to connect with science!

Feb 13

Poetry for Lincoln’s Birthday

It'd be a nice challenge to read this poem with older elementary readers:

O Captain! my Captain! our fearful trip is done,
The ship has weathered every rack, the prize we sought is won,
The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,
While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring;
But O heart! heart! heart!
O the bleeding drops of red,
Where on the deck my Captain lies,
Fallen cold and dead.

O Captain! my Captain! rise up and hear the bells;
Rise up–for you the flag is flung–for you the bugle trills,
For you bouquets and ribboned wreaths–for you the shores a-crowding,
For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;
Here Captain! dear father!
This arm beneath your head!
It is some dream that on the deck
You’ve fallen cold and dead.

My Captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still,
My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will.
The ship is anchored safe and sound, its voyage closed and done,
From fearful trip the victor ship comes in with object won;
Exult O shores, and ring O bells!
But I, with mournful tread,
Walk the deck my Captain lies,
Fallen cold and dead.

Walt Whitman – Leaves of Grass

Jan 01

Blogging The Reading Teacher - Dec 2008/Jan 2009

Reading Literacy Instruction with Digital and Media Technologies by Diane Barone and Todd E. Wright (subscription required), I came across lots of great technology resources.

Todd Wright's Classroom, at Fernley Elementary School in Fernley, Nevada incorporates technology through laptops provided for each student that they can use both in school and at home. Some sites the authors suggest in the article:

Flashcard Exchange - This site is a little unpolished, but it is a quick and useful resource for creating flashcards, rote memorization, and self-quizzing. Teachers can set up the flashcards for students to access.
Gaggle.Net - A nice site that provides email for student use. Teachers can block & monitor all student communication.
KidBiz3000 - While this is a service that a district would need to paid for, it does seem to be a good resource. Students are paired with ability-specific non-fiction articles. First they receive an email that provides a background knowledge prompt, then after reading they participate in polls, respond to multiple-choice questions, and open-ended response questions that would be good preparation for standardized tests.
Nettrekker - A search engine that prescreens web sites, rates them by reading level, and provides a student-friendly search environment.
QuizStar - Also subscription-based, this site enables teachers to create quizzes, attach media files, and manage your class's scores.

Thesaurus.com

United Streaming - Another subscription-based site. They have thousands of educational videos for online streaming.

The Writing Fix - Wow this site has lots of stuff on it! It will take time to sift through it all. So far I see loads of writing prompts, mentor text lessons specific to the 6+1 writing traits, and numerous opportunities for writing across the curriculum. A must see site.

Nov 22

Blogging The Reading Teacher

I received my November 2008 The Reading Teacher today and I thought I'd try to use this blog as a way of archiving ideas I get from the articles.

The first article is "For the Love of Words: Fostering Word Consciousness in Young Readers" by Michael F. Graves and Susan Watts-Taffe. (subscription required) This article discusses ways to promote word consciousness - "an awareness and interest in words and their meanings" - in the classroom. There are many good ideas in this article that would work in any classroom:
- Word Wall Favorites: students bring in favorite words to add to the word wall and classmates respond with synonyms, related words, ideas etc.
- The Word Station: An area in the classroom devoted to the love of words filled with dictionary, thesauruses, word games, riddle books, etc.
- Repeated read alouds in the early grades provide an opportunity to focus on complicated vocabulary and interesting words.
- Word Card Files: Files of subject-specific words students can refer to in their writing.
- Fun word play games like Applause Applause, Get It?, Word Associations, and Idea Completion (see article)
- Activities that focus on slang and how it has changed over generations. Students can interview parents and grandparents to learn about the slang they used when they were young.

Web Sites this article suggests for word activities:

- Between the Lions: This site has basic word games that focus on adjectives and synonyms. Suitable to grades 2-4.
- Vocabulary Parades at Debra Frasier's web site

Lesson Links:
- Vocabulary with Franklin: This lesson for first and second graders focusing on learning new vocabulary through many different modes - readers' theater, word games, and writing activities.
- Delicious, Tasty, Yummy: Enriching Writing with Adjectives and Synonyms: For 3rd & 4th grade, gain familiarity with adjectives and synonyms through webs, organizers, and picture books.
- The Magnetism of Language: Parts of Speech, Poetry, and Word Play: 6th - 8th grade. Students review the parts of speech, use them in poetry, and create their own magnetic poetry kits.

Books to Add to the Wishlist
:
- Donavan's Word Jar (Trophy Chapter Book)
- The Boy Who Loved Words
- Frindle
- Why the Banana Split
- Double Trouble In Walla Walla
- Miss Alaineus: A Vocabulary Disaster

Nov 05

Guests by Michael Dorris

Michael Dorris relates the story of Moss, a young Native American boy who is searching for his self identity while his family is struggling to forge a relationship with the Europeans who have recently come to their land. The language in this short chapter book is poetic and beautiful. While a third grader could read it, the subject matter would be a bit over his or her head - much more fitting for 4th-8th graders.
I've got sticky notes bulging from all over this book:

  • Chapter 1 - Great for teaching questioning and predicting as Dorris slowly unfolds the details about Moss and his family.
  • Many opportunities to read this book from a writer's perspective as Dorris uses language to describe feelings, situations, and relationships:
    • p. 25 "My thoughts seemed to bounce into each other, to play tag with me when I tried to grab them."
    • p. 38 "A thought arose from somewhere in the center of my body and spread like the circles that grown in water from the splash of a rock: this was not a game I could stop whenever I wanted to."
    • p. 60 "From somewhere deep inside me, a laugh got started and fought its way up through my nose."
  • p. 77 - Second paragraph is a great example of sensory imaging, could also be a nice way to introduce a visualizing mini-lesson.

Scholastic has a nice Discussion Guide filled with questions of every type and level, as well as a Vocabulary Builder.

Nov 03

Encounter by Jane Yolen

Jane Yolen takes you back in time to the arrival of Christopher Columbus, but tells the story from the perspective of a Taino boy as he encounters Europeans for the first time. The rich language and beautiful illustrations (by David Shannon) make this a book to read again and again.
There are many opportunities for teaching reading strategies in this book:

  • Questioning: The dream-like beginning provokes the reader to question what is happening, who the narrator is, and why his dreams are so haunting.
  • Predicting: Throughout the book, as the narrator continues to worry about the European's motives, readers can predict whether his tribal leaders will heed his warnings.
  • Inference: The narrator describes the Europeans as he understands them, which provides many opportunities for the reader to infer meaning.

Maureen Markelz

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