Friday, April 3, 2009

Poetry Break - New Poetry Book



In Aunt Giraffe’s Green Garden

by Jack Prelutsky


Introduction

Introduce children to the work of our Children’s Poet Laureate in this volume of “smiles and silliness.” Since many of the poems mention cities or states across the US, as you share each one, plot the place referenced on a map of North America.


In La Jolla, California


In La Jolla, California

Susu sat upon the sand,

Watching with a sense of wonder

How the water washed the land.


Susu saw, above the ocean,

Pelicans in graceful flight.

In La Jolla, California,

Susu laughed with great delight.


Extension

Perhaps your town or state has a “claim to fame” that would make a good subject for a silly poem. Try composing one together as a group or suggest children create a picture illustrating a local landmark or activity.



Don’t forget the companion volume, The Frog Wore Red Suspenders, published in 2002, and also illustrated by Petra Mathers.
































Prelutsky, Jack and Petra Mathers. 2007. In Aunt Giraffe’s Green Garden. New York: Greenwillow Books/HarperCollins.


-----. 2002. The Frog Wore Red Suspenders. New York: Greenwillow Books/HarperCollins.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Poetry Break - Poem with a Refrain


Hand in Hand: An American History Through Poetry

Collected by Lee Bennett Hopkins


Introduction

Share with children how the rhythm of the words in a poem forms an integral part of the listening experience by having the group pat softly on their legs in tempo to imitate the sound of a train on the tracks (pat,pat...pat,pat...pat,pat) while you read the following poem.


The Railroad Cars are Coming

 

The great Pacific railway,

   For California hail!

Bring on the locomotive,

   Lay down the iron rail;

Across the rolling prairies

   By steam we’re bound to go,

The railroad cars are coming, humming

   Through New Mexico.

The railroad cars are coming, humming

   Through New Mexico.


The little dogs in dog-town

   Will wag each little tail;

They’ll think that something’s coming

   A-riding on a rail.

The rattlesnake will show its fangs,

   The owl tu-whit, tu-who,

The railroad cars are coming, humming

   Through New Mexico.

The railroad cars are coming, humming

   Through New Mexico.


Extension

On repeated readings, children can join in reciting the final lines, and of course everyone can make the sound of train whistle fading in the distance at the end. As a trivia question, ask if anyone can identify the railway named partly for a New Mexico city. Answer: the Atchison,Topeka and Santa Fe Railway


Many other poems in this volume lend themselves to group choral reading:

Battle Won is Lost by Phil George

We Shall Overcome by Anonymous

Enemies by Charlotte Zolotow

What Shall We Do for the Striking Seamen? Traditional


Bennett, Lee Hopkins, ed. 1994. Hand in Hand: An American History Through Poetry. New York: Simon and Schuster.