I picked up a few poetry toys at nErDCampMI last week.
With
Instant Poetry, poetry forms meet multiple choice. You might want to try a nursery rhyme, a poem in the style of William Carlos Williams or Emily Dickinson, an ode, free verse, or more.
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I've been wanting to try writing a sonnet, so I chose the Shakespearean Sonnet (bottom left in the collage above).
Before the Fates (b) cut in this checkout line
Let all who (a) brought some queso dip please stay
And find our (c) kids out back making green slime.
Neither king nor fool (a) returns their lunch tray.
Though time (b) cares not when chickens come to roost,
We hear the (a) band at least will take the stage.
Ok. I'm going to stop there. There are others that have options that string together with more sense. Let's try the Nursery Rhyme (top right).
Mary, Mary, quite contrary
(a) loved sarcastic commentary.
scribble-out poetry (aka blackout poetry) has a lot more poet-ential. This spiral-bound book has 45 bits of text ready for you to modify by scribbling-out the words you don't want with your permanent marker and leaving behind your poem. The text comes in different shapes (see top of collage) and amounts (see bottom of collage). Sources for the text bits include
Frankenstein,
The Count of Monte Cristo,
War and Peace, and
Pride and Prejudice, just to name a few. Each page is perforated and includes "to" and "from" lines and the attribution for the original text on the back so that you can gift your poetic creations!
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I scribbled-out a bit from
Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin (top right in the collage). This poem goes out to all the teachers who are enjoying their last weeks of living-and-learning-at-a-relaxing-pace.
Great
fortune
if you teach.
You contribute to the happiness of
life,
consume the
daily
pleasure of being
a good
instrument.
Scribbled-out by Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Carol, at
Carol's Corner, is just one of those teachers for whom this poem was written! She's got the Poetry Friday roundup this week.