Based off Jill Eggleton’s book Lighting the Literacy Fire, I wanted to have a weekly poem but with a different focus each day. Jill’s book is geared for students in PreK-2nd grade, but I adapted it to work with my 4th, 5th, and 6th graders.
We will capture each day in our interactive notebooks (another new undertaking for this year that I’m extremely excited about, but also freaking out over!).
- Monday – Comprehension
- Tuesday – Vocabulary
- Wednesday – Point of View & Author’s Purpose
- Thursday – Theme & Tone/Mood
- Friday – Summarize & Make Connections
Then I started thinking (because I tend to do way too much of that)… I might only be able to work on poetry four days a week due to other obligations, snow days, and just the simple fact that things often come up that are beyond my control. So I made a four day schedule as well. Here’s the short version of that –
4th Grade
- Monday – Comprehension – RL.4.1,RF.4.4a, RF.4.4b
- Tuesday – Vocabulary – RL.4.4
- Wednesday – Point of View, Author’s Purpose, Connections – RL.4.6+
- Thursday – Theme, Summarize – RL.4.2
5th Grade
- Monday – Comprehension – RL.5.1, RF.5.4a, RF.5.4b
- Tuesday – Vocabulary – RL.5.4
- Wednesday – Point of View, Author’s Purpose, Tone – RL.5.6, RL.5.7
- Thursday – Theme & Summarize – RL.5.2
6th Grade
- Monday – Comprehension – RL.6.1
- Tuesday – Vocabulary – RL.6.4
- Wednesday – Point of View, Author’s Purpose, Theme/Mood – RL.6.6
- Thursday – Theme & Summarize – RL.6.2
Is your next question, where will I get poems? Yea – mine too. So I started doing some research. A teacher-blogger buddy of mine suggested these last spring (and of course now I can’t remember who that was – sorry!). I’ve bought the ebook version of 4th, 5th, and 6th grades. This way I can project poems each day directly from my ipad. I’m hoping it’s quick and painless…
My goal is to get to the point where we are spending just five minutes a day on our poetry. I’m hoping it keeps skills fresh in students’ minds and exposes them to various types of poetry. They encounter poems on state tests AND poetry is often part of everyday life. The more I can expose them to now, the better off they’ll be in the future.
Kristina Wing Plattner says
Love the idea. 🙂 Let us know how it goes. (Maybe if I can get my booty into gear we can *share* experiences!.)
Denise says
Love this and would like to see ur plan for 3rd grade. Thanks for sharing!
Mary Bauer says
I love teaching my students how to read and write poetry. What a great idea for starting each day.
Laura Corsano says
I love these ideas!! Do you have any great ideas for teaching English Language learners these concepts?
Heather W says
Laura –
Based on my previous experience with ELL, I would probably do much the same concept. Except I might use a poem for two weeks instead of one, allowing me two days to go through each of the components. It really depends on where they are at with language acquisition. Last year I had one little guy who was only in his second year in the US, and he held his own with his native-English peers. It was harder for him, but he was able to plug along. 🙂
When I taught 100% ELL students, I didn't do this concept – but I know they could have handled it. Starting the year SLOWLY and modeling a LOT would be crucial! However, it's definitely possible. Good luck! And please stop back and let us know how it goes if you go this route.
Thanks!
~HoJo~
Laurie Burghardt says
As part of our morning routine (2nd grade) we do an art reproduction of the week, with a song for the week, and a poem for the week. (organized in an art history timeline from ancient to modern)We practice all week & on Fridays the kids present their poems to the class. They really get "into" it with props & costumes etc.