Showing posts with label Lesson Poem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lesson Poem. Show all posts

Saturday, April 12, 2025

HELLO MY NAME IS - Day 12

Happy National Poetry Month!

(Feel free to search for poems in the sidebar or watch videos in the tab above.)


Hello, Poetry Friends! This month I am sharing poems written in the voice of Little Red Riding Hood, and I invite you to join me in writing in the voice of someone else too. You might choose a fairy tale character or a book character or a person from history or anyone else real or imagined. These are your poems, so you make the decisions. Each April day, I will share my poem and a little bit about writing poetry. Mostly, we’ll just be writing in short lines with good words and not worrying about rhyming. Meaning first. Our focus this month will be adopting the perspective of another…for 30 days. I invite you to join me in this project! To do so, simply:

1. Choose a character from fiction or history or somewhere else in the world of space and time, and commit to writing a daily poem in this person's voice for the 30 days of April 2025. You might even choose an animal.

2. Write a new poem for each day of April. Feel free to print and find inspiration from this idea sheet that I will be writing from all month long.


Teachers, if you wish to share any HELLO MY NAME IS... subjects or poems, please email them to me at the contact button above. I would love to read what your students write and learn from how they approach their own projects.

LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD'S POEMS SO FAR
(I learned about Vocaroo in a school yesterday. 
I am trying to find something that plays easily in schools. Does this?)

Students - This month, I am inspired by my friend Tricia, writer at The Miss Rumphius Effect, to try some new forms. She shares many at her site, and so today I wrote my first etheree.

An etheree is a ten line poem that begins with one syllable per line and ends with 10 syllables, growing like this:

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

Or, the form can move in the opposite syllable direction, beginning with 10 syllables and ending with 1 as I have done above:

10

9

8

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

Learn more about this form, and maybe try it yourself HERE with Liz Garton Scanlon.

Thank you so much to all of the teachers, librarians, administrators, PTO parents, and students who welcomed me so warmly to different Ohio schools today. I could not have felt more welcomed by your warmth and kindness and loved seeing your art, reading your poetry, and sharing with you.

Sign by Students of Alton Darby Elementary
Hilliard, Ohio

Thank you, friends, for joining me on this twelfth day of HELLO MY NAME IS...

To learn about more National Poetry Month projects and all kinds of April goodness, visit Jama's Alphabet Soup where Jama has generously gathered this coming month's Kidlitosphere poetry happenings. And if you are interested in learning about or writing from any of my previous 14 National Poetry Month projects, you can find them here. Happy National Poetry Month!

xo,

Amy

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Friday, January 14, 2022

Gather Family Stories & Go

 

My Great Grandmother's Headstone
Mount Hope Cemetery, Rochester, NY




Students - I spend lots of time thinking about today and tomorrow and yesterday. But lately, I find myself thinking about many yesterdays ago. My mother is writing her parents' and grandparents' stories, and I love reading these echoes of our past and thinking about how they may have changed me without me even knowing it. She is doing this through Storyworth, an online service that helps you print a book, one story at a time, all throughout the year. Last year she wrote her own life stories, and this year she is writing memories about her/our ancestors.

My Mom's First Book
Storyworth

My mom has given me permission to share her story about her Grandma Katherine. Enjoy this delightful step back in time:

MY WONDERFUL PATERNAL GRANDMOTHER
by Deborah Ludwig, January 11, 2022

   Katherine Moeser Dreyer was my dad’s mom.  She was an amazing person in so many ways and had such a wonderful impact on my early life.  My mom was ill a lot as I was growing up and I lived at Grandma and Grandpa Dreyers for much of the time.  Grandma came from Germany when she was a little girl with her two older sisters Minnie and Margaret.  The three girls had been orphaned and the family felt they would have a better life in Rochester, New York living with an uncle who operated a successful butcher shop.  She learned English and was able to go back and forth in her conversations in both languages.  She stuck to German when I was around, especially while discussing family gossip.
     Grandma was an excellent cook.  I sat in that large kitchen watching her and her sister Minnie get everything ready for her wonderful vegetable soup.  Minnie and her husband Fred lived with my grandparents in their half of the double side by side home they owned.  My grandma did most of the work in those days as my grandfather William had fallen off the stairs of a bus and had a hard time getting around.  He was a clothing cutter for Hickey Freeman in Rochester before his accident.  Grandma was known for her special dinners of sauerbraten, red cabbage, and potato pancakes.  Her baking was amazing.  Every Saturday my dad and I stopped at their home on Hobart Street and picked up a home-made fruit kuchen which can never be duplicated. They always had fruit all over the top and my favorite was cherry.  Dad and I would go in to the house around noon on Saturday and pick up his shirts all cleaned and ironed.  My mother stopped doing his work shirts when he said his mother did them better.  Grandma and grandpa would be watching The Big Top Circus show on their black and white tv.,  Grandpa smoking his cigar.
      When they celebrated their 50th anniversary, I was too young to attend the party and sat at the top of the stairs watching all the celebrations.  Grandma hated to be called Kate and I have a vase she got on this occasion that said Bill and Kate.  I am sure she hated it.  Years later it broke, but I was able to find someone to fix it and still treasure it today.
   Grandma had a gorgeous garden full of huge daises, poppies ,  and so many other lovely plants.  She was so proud of it and I spent many a day in that garden and on their front porch, dreaming and reading as a kid tends to do.    
  When I was really little, I would walk two blocks with her to the grocery store, and then she would buy me a piece of furniture for my doll house.  Those days were really special.
    She used to stoke the furnace in the basement with coal and even lost her engagement ring doing that.  My Uncle Fred had a secret cabinet in that basement with either wine or liquor which was totally off limits to me.  Once I even got to witness the coal delivery and to me it was exciting to watch that coal come down the chute.
   I knew my grandma was getting older when I had to thread her needle for her as she said her eyes weren’t so good anymore.  She was beautiful with waist length long white hair and when she let it down to brush it, I thought she was amazing. I would sit near that claw foot tub and watch her let it cascade.
     Grandma had a tiny parlor with the most beautiful glass swan filled with red water to tell the humidity.  I would perch on the formal sofa or chair and watch it by the hour.  This was the fancy room as the dining room was more like the family rooms of today.
      I can still see her on her knees lacing my grandfather’s high button shoes which were even old-fashioned for the 1950’s.   She was the life and breath of this family.   The picture of the little girl hanging in her bedroom still stays with me as this was the room I always slept in.
     When I was 10 years old, my mother came into my room in the morning and told me grandma had died.  She was 78 and had washed and ironed all her curtains that day.  I missed her so much and it was the end of a very special time in my life.

Do you know any of your family's old stories? If so, consider keeping a page in your notebook to list the ones you remember. You can also ask questions of your parents and grandparents and aunts and uncles, questions like:
  • What was school like when you were my age?
  • What was your favorite toy?
  • Can you tell me about a special memory you hae of time with one of your grandparents?
  • How did our family members settle in the cities where they lived?
  • Will you please tell me something about your great grandparents?
  • What is this object? (Find something in your house that looks old.) What is its story?
Once you have a story that particulary interests you, you can ask more questions about it:
  • Is there anything else you can add to what yo told me?
  • Do you remember anything else about that?
  • Are there any photographs or objects that I can see connected to this?
  • Is there anyone else I can ask to learn more?
Try taking one story or memory that you have learned about your family and writing it as a poem. You might, as I did, choose to take a lesson from the story. You'll notice that my poem tells the story first, and then it tells what I take away from it. 

Or, you might choose to simply tell the story. If you are uncertain of a particular detail, you may choose to invent it. For example, I do not know for sure that my great grandmother and her sisters held hands on the boat, but I sure imagine that they must have. How scary it must have been for them...

Our family histories are part of us, and I am looking forward to learning more. Who are these people in these photographs? How I wish I could speak to them today.

Mary Lee is hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup at A(nother) Year of Reading with a wise poem titled "What the Pomegranate Knows." Please know that all are welcome each Friday as folks share poems, poem books, poetry ideas, and friendship.

I wish you fascination in your story-collecting journey.

xo,
Amy

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