About Hands on Stanzas

Hands on Stanzas, the educational outreach program of the Poetry Center of Chicago places professional, teaching Poets in residence at Chicago Public Schools across the city. Poets teach the reading, discussion, and writing of poetry to 3 classes over the course of 20 classroom visits, typically from October through April. Students improve their reading, writing, and public speaking skills, and participating teachers report improved motivation and academic confidence. You can contact Cassie Sparkman, Director of the Hands on Stanzas program, by phone: 312.629.1665 or by email: csparkman(at)poetrycenter.org for more information.

Monday, November 19, 2007

Haiku!!!

I wasn't at Pasteur last week (they had vacation) and I won't be at Pasteur next week (Thanksgiving), but THIS week we made up for it by writing a whole month's work of HAIKU!

I took in a selection of several haiku written by Basho and Issa. We discussed the basic form of haiku: 3 lines, 5-7-5 syllabic count and then read through the poems. Afterwards, I asked the students if they noticed a common theme in all of the haiku we read, "These poems are about nature!" they shouted. Indeed--they were! We talked about the strong images in the poem. I equated the haiku to a snapshot. What was seen? Heard?

For their assignment, I had them divide their paper into three sections. I told them they'd be writing THREE poems today: a nature haiku, a city haiku and a classroom haiku. They were really intrigued by this prompt. I told them to make their haiku three lines long, but don't worry about the syllablic count. In the past, I've found that students will spend SO much time and energy making sure a poem has 17 syllables that they forget to consider content. The results were fabulous --- as usual! Here are some poems from both my 4th grade class and my 6th grade class.

Ms. Sirven's 4th Grade Class:

Classroom Haiku
Victor S.

The teacher
talking about
the ocean's life


Nature Haiku
Diego S.

A tiger is growling
doesn't know what to do
he's a shiney sun bursting


Nature Haiku
Brenda H.

Tiger runs through
forest and makes
shivering winds at light moon


Nature Haiku
Christopher

There were flies
a wolf feasting
on a dear


City Haiku
Christopher

A train on top of me
the train rumbling
so loud

Ms. Villa's 6th Grade Class:


City Haiku
Daniel P.

Spinners spinning
Gunshots going
People running


City Haiku
Isaac L.

Hearing car horns
People shouting at each other
The sound of a car crashing


Classroom Haiku
Natalia

Clock ticking, no one listening
Kids are reading
No one is hearing


Nature Haiku
Pablo V.

A mother bear
roaring like a savage
to protect her cubs

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