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English Language Arts Level 7 #23 Ms. Walker

English Language Arts Level 7 #23 Ms. Walker. Today’s Objectives. Types of Poetry The Rhythm of Poetry Writing Poetry Worksheet Idiom of the Day. Assignment.

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English Language Arts Level 7 #23 Ms. Walker

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  1. English Language ArtsLevel 7 #23Ms. Walker

  2. Today’s Objectives Types of Poetry The Rhythm of Poetry Writing Poetry Worksheet Idiom of the Day

  3. Assignment In order to get full enjoyment out of a poem, you must understand the techniques used by the writer. Complete the Scavenger Hunt worksheet to review some of the different literary devices used in poetry.

  4. Assignment Complete the rhyme scheme worksheet that accompanies this lesson.

  5. Break

  6. Types of Poetry

  7. TYPES OF POETRY There are a number of styles of poetry, each with its own rules. Different styles are used for different subjects.

  8. Acrostic Acrostic: poetry in which the first letter of each line, when read vertically, spell out a word. The word is usually the subject of the poem.

  9. Acrostic

  10. Haiku Haiku: an ancient Japanese form with no rhyme. Haiku often deals with nature. This type of poetry has three lines with a fixed number of syllables: Line 1 has 5 syllables; Line 2 has 7 syllables and Line 3 has 5.

  11. Haiku I like spring waterIt makes me feel good insideIt takes my breath away.

  12. Rhyming Couplets Couplets: two-line poems with a simple rhyming pattern. Each line has the same meter and their endings rhyme with one another so that they appear as a coherent whole.

  13. Rhyming Couplets "Parting is such sweet sorrow That I will say goodnight till it be morrow."

  14. Cinquain Cinquain: a form consisting of five lines. Each has a required number of syllables, and a specific topic. There are three patterns for the Cinquain.

  15. Cinquain #1 Line1: One word Line2: Two words Line 3: Three words Line 4: Four words Line 5: One word Dinosaurs Lived once, Long ago, but Only dust and dreams Remain

  16. Cinquain #2 Line1: A noun Line2: Two adjectives Line 3: Three -ing words Line 4: A phrase Line 5: Another word for the noun Spaghetti Messy, spicy Slurping, sliding, falling Between my plate and mouth Delicious

  17. Cinquain #3 Line1: 2 syllables Line2: 4 syllables Line 3: 6 syllables Line 4: 8 syllables Line 5: 2 syllables Baseball Bat cracks against The pitch, sending it out Over the back fence, I did it! Homerun

  18. Diamante Diamonte poems: diamond-shaped poems of seven lines that are written using parts of speech. The Diamonte is a form similar to the Cinquain. The purpose is to go from the subject at the top of the diamond to another totally different (and sometimes opposite) subject ...

  19. Diamante Line 1 = 1 noun. Line 2 = 2 adjectives. Line 3 = 3 gerunds Line 4 = 1 noun. Line 5 = 4 nouns Line 6 = 3 gerunds Line 7 = 2 adjectives

  20. Diamante Winter Rainy, cold Skiing, skating, sledding Mountains, wind, breeze, ocean Swimming, surfing, scuba diving Sunny, hot Summer

  21. Free Verse Free Verse: poetry without rules of form, rhyme, rhythm, or meter.

  22. Free Verse In FlightWake up to a bright sapphire morning Cloudless skiesThis can only mean one thingIt’s a go!

  23. Free Verse In Flight At the launch siteTeeth chit-chattering And not just from the c-cold

  24. Proverbs Proverbs: have been called the shortest art form. They use devices associated with poetry- rhyme, rhythm, and metaphors. They provide vivid imagery to teach a moral lesson.

  25. Proverbs Proverbs are either persuasive or expository. Examples of proverbs that persuade people to action are 'The squeaky wheel gets the grease';'Wake up and smell the roses'; and 'The early bird gets the worm.’

  26. Proverbs Proverbs that dissuade people from doing things: 'If you drive, don't drink.' and 'Don't count your chickens before they hatch.’.

  27. Limericks Limericks: whimsical poems with five lines. Lines one, two, and five rhyme with each other and lines three and four rhyme with each other. Rhyme pattern: AABBA

  28. Limericks There was an Old Man of NantucketWho kept all his cash in a bucket.His daughter, called Nan,Ran away with a man,And as for the bucket, Nantucket. - Anonymous

  29. Shape Poems Shape Poems(concrete poems): poem that forms a visible picture on the page. The shape usually reflects the subject of the poem.

  30. Shape Poems

  31. Shape Poems

  32. Rap Rap: spoken-word expression of urban activists that began in the 1960s. In the early 70s "rapping" evolved into spoken rhymes about street life put to the beat of DJ-manipulated drum machines and turntables.

  33. Rap "My rhymes are like shot clocks, interstate cops and blood clots,my point is your flow gets stopped."

  34. Sonnets Sonnets: poems of 14 lines that begin with three quatrains and end with a couplet. The couplet usually contains a surprise ending or "turn." William Shakespeare is one of the most famous sonnet writers in history.

  35. Sonnet 1 From fairest creatures we desire increase,That thereby beauty’s rose might never die.But as the riper should by time decease,

  36. Sonnet 1 His tender heir might bear his memory:But thou, contracted to thine own bright eyes,Feed'st thy light’s flame with self-substantial fuel,

  37. Sonnet 1 Making a famine where abundance lies,Thyself thy foe, to thy sweet self too cruel.Thou that art now the world’s fresh ornament

  38. Sonnet 1 And only herald to the gaudy spring,Within thine own bud buriest thy contentAnd, tender churl, mak'st waste in niggarding.

  39. Sonnet 1 Pity the world, or else this glutton be,To eat the world’s due, by the grave and thee. by Shakespeare

  40. Sonnet 1 Interpretation The beautiful things in the world must reproduce themselves for the world’s enjoyment. Don’t be selfish by keeping your beauty to yourself. You waste your beauty by refusing to reproduce it.

  41. Narrative Poems Narrative poems: tell stories and are usually long. Epics and ballads are narrative poems.

  42. Narrative Poems The Epic Narrative Poem tells a story with a beginning, middle, and end. There's a setting, a main character, a conflict, a climax, and an outcome (resolution). Epics are very long and emotional.

  43. Narrative Poems The Ballad Narrative Poem is a short narrative poem telling an actual folk story or folk-like story in verse form.  Sometimes it has a fallen hero.

  44. Quatrains Quatrains: rhyming poems of four lines. Poets use letters to express the rhyme pattern or scheme. The four types of quatrain rhyme are: AABB, ABAB, ABBA, and ABCB.

  45. Quatrains The mountain frames the sky(a) As a shadow of an eagle flies by. (a) With clouds hanging at its edge(b) A climber proves his courage on its rocky ledge. (b)

  46. Write a Poem Use the “Writing Poems worksheet to create 4 different types of poems, the acrostic, the diamante, haiku and free verse. Be sure to follow the instructions for writing each type of poem.

  47. Break

  48. My Papa’s Waltz “My Papa’s Waltz” by Theodore Roethke Read along as you listen to the poem. Note the teacher’s explanation of the poem’s meaning and his description of rhyme and meter.

  49. My Papa's Waltz The whiskey on your breathCould make a small boy dizzy;But I hung on like death:Such waltzing was not easy.

  50. My Papa's Waltz We romped until the pansSlid from the kitchen shelf;My mother's countenanceCould not unfrown itself.

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