Lesson - paterson.k12.nj.us



Lesson 25 - Lesson PlanChoosing a Poem to WriteNarrative Poem : Parody Poem : Riddle Poem : LimerickAim: To write an original poem. NJSLS.W.8.10.Focus: “Today we are going to choose which kind of poem to write and create an original of that kind of poem.” Assessment: The assessment rubric for this lesson is below.On-Task Student Assessment RubricPoints EarnedStudent listens attentively to the PowerPoint.5Student works independently or in a group without supervision.10Student use confusion to ask questions.5 Total Points Earned20Procedure: Teacher makes assessment rubric available to class.Teacher distributes writing folders to students.Whole Class InstructionTeacher shows PowerPoint to class which explains the four kinds of poems from which students can choose.Group or Independent Writing ActivityTeacher chooses to assign independent writing, partnering, or group writing. Teacher instructs students to choose the kind of poem they wish to write. A summary of each kind of poem is on p. 2.Teacher circulates to assist, evaluate, and conference.Teacher instructs students to prepare to share their poems.Teacher implements sharing in the method that works best for the class.Suggestion: Teacher may want to publish the class’ poems into a class literary magazine.Highlights and Recap: Teacher asks a few volunteers to share something their evaluator caught in during eh peer evaluation exercise that enabled them to improve their essays.Narrative PoemA narrative poem tells a story. When you write a narrative poem, you may want to write it in sentences and then change the sentences into poetic lines.2569210160020AABBAAA0AABBAAAUse a rhyme scheme Twinkle, twinkle, little star, How I wonder what you are. Up above the world so high, Like a diamond in the sky. Twinkle, twinkle, little star, How I wonder what you are!' Parody PoemA parody is the imitation of a famous poem that deliberately exaggerates to achieve a comic or satirical effect. When you write a parody poem,Follow the rhythm of the famous poem.You may want to follow the rhyme of the famous poem but it is not necessary.Write your own story; do not use the story of the original poem.LimerickA Limerick is a rhymed humorous, and or nonsense poem.When you write a limerick, use five lines and a rhyme scheme of: a-a-b-b-a.A Riddle PoemA riddle poem is a poem that answers a riddle.Begin your riddle poem with the answer to the riddle. Choose a concrete object such as a desk, helicopter, or fingerprint scanning machine from a novel, poem, short story, or article that you and your classmates have studied in class.Tell your riddle poem from the point of view of your object; pretend that you are that object.Include figurative language and connotative words in your poem when possible. ................
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