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E-raamat: Text Structures From Poetry, Grades 4-12: Lessons to Help Students Read, Analyze, and Create Poems They Will Remember

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  • Sari: Corwin Literacy
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Jan-2020
  • Kirjastus: Corwin Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781544398860
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Corwin Literacy
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Jan-2020
  • Kirjastus: Corwin Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781544398860

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Poetry is a joyful art form, but how do you teach students to joyfully read, analyze, and write poems? In Text Structures from Poetry, Grades 4-12, award-winning educator Gretchen Bernabei teams up with noted poet Laura Van Prooyen to light the path.

Centered around 50 classroom-proven lesson and poem pairs, the mentor texts represent a broad range of voices in contemporary poetry and the canon. These unique and engaging lessons show educators how to "pop the hood" on a poem to discover what makes it work, using text structures to unlock the engine of a poem.  This method enables educators to engage students in reading and re-reading a poem closely, to identify how the parts of the poem relate to each other to create movement, and to leverage what they have learned to write their own evocative poems. 

Each of the 50 lessons includes a mentor poem that serves as an excellent model for young writers, a diagram that illustrates the text structure of the poem, and several inspiring examples of student poems written to emulate the mentor poem. Easy-to-use instructional resources enhance instructor and student understanding and include: 





Teaching notes for unlocking the text structure of a poem and the engine that makes it work.  Tips for exploring rhyme scheme, meter, and fixed forms.  Instructional sequences that vary the ways students can read and write poems and other prose forms.  Ideas for revising and publishing student poems.  A "Meet the Contemporary Authors" section that includes fascinating messages from the contemporary poets.

Teach your students to learn about poetry using the magic of poems themselves and lead the way to a rewarding love of poetry for teachers and students alike. 
Acknowledgments x
Introduction xii
LESSON
1(2)
CONTEMPORARY POEMS
3(98)
1 Kelli Russell Agodon: Love Waltz With Fireworks
4(4)
2 Sarah Anderson: At the Lake
8(4)
3 Jimmy Santiago Baca: I Am Offering This Poem
12(4)
4 Sheila Black: Possums
16(4)
5 Joe Brainard: I Remember (Excerpt)
20(4)
6 Joanne Diaz: My Mother's Tortilla
24(4)
7 Vievee Francis: Still Life With Summer Sausage, a Blade, and No Blood
28(4)
8 Ann Hudson: Chorus, Venable Elementary
32(4)
9 August Kleinzahler: Snow in North Jersey
36(4)
10 Amy Ludwig VanDerwater: Draw
40(4)
11 Nathan McClain: Nighthawks by Edward Hopper
44(4)
12 Rose McLarney: Full Capacity
48(4)
13 Naomi Shihab Nye: Becauseof Libraries We Can Say These Things
52(4)
14 Matthew Olzmann: Letter to a Cockroach, Now Dead and Mixed Into a Bar of Chocolate
56(4)
15 Octavio Quintanilla: Parting
60(4)
16 Leslie Contreras Schwartz: The Falcon
64(4)
17 Patricia Smith: Fixing on the Next Star
68(4)
18 Angela Narciso Torres: What I Learned This Week
72(4)
19 Natalia Trevino: Maria
76(4)
20 Laura Van Prooyen: On the Shoreline
80(4)
21 Laura Van Prooyen: As Always, Thirty Years Between Us
84(4)
22 Laura Van Prooyen: Postcard From Texas
88(4)
23 Laura Van Prooyen: One of Those Days
92(4)
24 Laura Van Prooyen: She Inherits His Steady Hand
96(5)
CLASSIC POEMS
101(113)
25 Anne Bradstreet: The Author to Her Book
102(4)
26 Elizabeth Barrett Browning: Sonnet 43: How Do I Love Thee? Let Me Count the Ways
106(4)
27 Robert Browning: My Last Duchess
110(6)
28 Robert Burns: To a Mouse
116(4)
29 Olivia Ward Bush-Banks: Regret
120(4)
30 Emily Dickinson: I Heard a Fly Buzz - When I Died
124(4)
31 John Donne: The Flea
128(4)
32 Paul Lawrence Dunbar: A Musical
132(4)
33 T.S. Eliot: Preludes (Excerpt)
136(4)
34 Robert Frost: Fire and Ice
140(4)
35 Frances Ellen Harper: Learning to Read
144(4)
36 Oliver Wendell Holmes: Old Ironsides
148(4)
37 Gerard Manley Hopkins: Pied Beauty
152(4)
38 A. E. Housman: When I Was One-and-Twenty
156(4)
39 Marianne Moore: A Jelly-Fish
160(4)
40 Wilfred Owen: Dulce et Decorum Est
164(4)
41 Edgar Allan Poe: The Raven
168(10)
42 Alexander Pope: An Essay on Man (Excerpt)
178(4)
43 Alexander Posey: On the Capture and Imprisonment of Crazy Snake, January 1900
182(4)
44 Carl Sandburg: Grass
186(4)
45 William Shakespeare: Sonnet 130: My Mistress' Eyes Are Nothing: Like the Sun
190(4)
46 Percy Bysshe Shelley: Ozymandias
194(4)
47 Dylan Thomas: Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night
198(4)
48 Walt Whitman: I Saw in Louisiana a Live-Oak Growing
202(4)
49 William Wordsworth: I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud
206(4)
50 William Butler Yeats: When You Are Old
210(4)
APPENDICES
214
1 Complete Collection of 50 Text Structures
215(7)
2 Glossary: Fixed Forms
222(1)
3 Glossary: Meter
223(1)
4 Glossary: Rhyme
224(1)
5 Positive Points for Potential Poets by Patricia S. Gray
225(2)
6 How Can I Improve My Poem? (Plus Bonus Notes From Laura)
227(2)
7 Journal Page: Metaphor
229(1)
8 Journal Page: Pitchfork
230(1)
9 Journal Page: Personification
231(1)
10 Journal Page: Truism
232(1)
11 Journal Page: Verbs
233(1)
12 Journal Page: Visual Image
234(1)
13 Reading Lenses and STAAR Stem Questions
235(1)
14 Meet the Contemporary Authors: Author Fun Facts
236
A popular workshop presenter and winner of NCTEs James Moffett Award in 2010, Gretchen Bernabei has been teaching kids to write in middle school and high school classrooms for more than thirty years. In addition to four other professional books and numerous articles for NCTE journals, she is the author of National Geographic School Publications The Good Writers Kit, as well as Lightning in a Bottle, a CD of visual writing prompts. Laura Van Prooyen is author of two collections of poetry, Our House Was on Fire (Ashland Poetry Press 2015) and Inkblot and Altar (Pecan Grove Press 2006). She has more than 20 years experience teaching poetry and writing in a variety of academic settings including: Dominican University, Chicago Public Schools, Del Valle High School, and Henry Ford Academy: The Alameda School for Art + Design. Presently, Van Prooyen teaches in the Low-Res MFA Creative Writing Program at Miami University in Oxford, OH and lives in San Antonio, TX. You can find more of her work at www.lauravanprooyen.com.