April (2023) is National Poetry Appreciation Month!

 

For over 20 years, libraries, schools, and poets have celebrated April as National Poetry Month. This post will provide you with great resources that you can use in your classes. We hope they can help instill the love of poetry in our students!

  1. Poets.org This is one of the best sites. There you can download this year’s poster, participate in Poem in Your Pocket Day (April 27), explore how the Dear Poet project appeals to students, sign up to read a Poem-a-Day and check out 30 more ways to celebrate.
  2. PBS NewsHour & Poetry. The Newshour has a great Poetry Series which creates modern poets for students with lessons and videos. 
  3. NCTE Poetry Page. The NCTE's Read.Think.Write. website has many resources for teachers and connections to additional resources.
  4. NYT Learning Blog's "28 Ways to Teach and Learn About Poetry With The New York Times."  
  5. Try a Golden Shovel Poem! NYT Article
  6. NPR's Poetry Life Kit (or How Top Get Started with Poetry)
  7. Edutopia. There are 16 great resources here, including many for elementary teachers. 

Here are some additional resources from Richard Byrne's FreeTech4Teachers blog:

Poets.org offers thirty activities for celebrating National Poetry Month. If you'd like even more ideas for National Poetry Month, take a look my short list of suggestions below. 

ReadWriteThink Poetry Interactives
Earlier this year ReadWriteThink relaunched nearly all of their interactive writing tools so that they no longer relied on Flash. That means you can now use them in any modern web browser. My favorite of their interactive poetry writing tools is the Word Mover tool that resembles refrigerator magnet poetry. Take a look at this short video to see the current version of ReadWriteThink's Word Mover interactive.


Coding With Poetry Coding With Poetry is a feature from Code.org. There are two activities available on the Coding With Poetry page. The first is a short, Hour of Code activity in which students animate a poem by writing some simple code. The second is a longer activity that is part of Code.org's Computer Science Connections curriculum. In the second activity students write a program that writes poetry (I did a similar thing with my 9th graders last year and it took some of them two class periods to complete it).


Poetry With AI Verse by Verse is an experimental AI project from Google. Verse by Verse lets you compose poems by combining lines from the works of famous poets. In other words, it's a poetry remix tool. To use it you simply visit the site and select three poets to inspire you. Then you write your own first line of a poem. Once you've written a line of your own Verse by Verse will suggest three lines from each of the three poets you originally selected. You can then include those lines in your new poem. Finished poems can be downloaded as text overlaid on a background image.  

Make Beliefs Comix offers more than 700 writing prompt pages. All of the pages are designed to be printed and given to students to write on. Within that collection, you will find a small collection of poetry pages. All the printable poetry prompt pages include artwork designed to spark a student's imagination. Some of the artwork is in color and some are in black and white. A bonus of the black-and-white artwork is that you're essentially getting a coloring page and poetry prompt in one package.

Poetry 180 is a Library of Congress project that was created when Billy Collins was the U.S. Poet Laureate. The purpose of the project is to provide high school teachers with poems for their students to read or hear throughout the school year. Collins selected the poems for Poetry 180 with high school students in mind. I didn't look at every poem in the list, but of the dozen or so that I looked at, none would take more than a few minutes to read in a classroom. Speaking of reading in class, Collins encourages teachers to read the poems aloud or have students read the poems aloud. To that end, here's his advice on how to read a poem out loud.

There's a Poem for That is a series of twelve TED-Ed lessons featuring six famous works. The lessons include poems from Frost, Shakespeare, Yeats, O'Keefe, Gibson, and Elhillo.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

National Hispanic Heritage Month - 2022 Resources

Edutopia's Look at Student Stress & More

BHM Month Resources 2023