learning poetic elements Archives - Teaching ELA in the Middle https://teachingelainthemiddle.com/tag/learning-poetic-elements/ and living life one day- and book- at a time Mon, 29 Nov 2021 20:07:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://i0.wp.com/teachingelainthemiddle.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Black-with-Book-Shelf-Icon-Education-Logo.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 learning poetic elements Archives - Teaching ELA in the Middle https://teachingelainthemiddle.com/tag/learning-poetic-elements/ 32 32 194908938 Poetry Lapbooks https://teachingelainthemiddle.com/poetry-lapbooks/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=poetry-lapbooks Tue, 30 Nov 2021 15:20:00 +0000 http://teachingelainthemiddle.com/?p=184 One of the projects that I like to do every other year is to have my students create Poetry Lapbooks. I generally will assign the lapbook at the beginning of the unit and will teach my content throughout. By the end of the unit the students will have their list of terms and examples from …

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One of the projects that I like to do every other year is to have my students create Poetry Lapbooks. I generally will assign the lapbook at the beginning of the unit and will teach my content throughout. By the end of the unit the students will have their list of terms and examples from their lessons to include in their lapbook. I also give the students time throughout to work on the lapbook, and include ways to incorporate the large number of terms into their lapbook without using up all of their space. The reason for this is that students have to include a minimum of 3 poems in their lapbook (2 they have written and 1 favorite). As we go through our unit, they will have written at least 3 poems (All About Me, Haiku, and Concrete).

All of our Lapbooks start off the same with a plain manilla folder that I give them. They can choose to use it as is, or they may fold it.

I highly encourage them to decorate the outside. This allows them some personality. The only problem is that some get caught up in the decorating and don’t move into the filling of the lapbook. It’s important that they decorate and move forward.

Students are asked to fill up all of the space with terms and examples. This isn’t including the poems that they have written yet. Each term has to have a definition and an example. As I teach a term, we study examples. They are free to use any of the examples from class, but not from the PowerPoint. The reason for this is to make students go back into their text and pull the examples because those are on the test, not the PowerPoint that was created using an older textbook.

When I’m teaching poetic elements, we generally do a close reading of the poems and I demonstrate marking up the text, and then the students will do the same with at least 2 other poems. By the time we are finished, all of the poems in their Close Reading books are marked up and they should have examples for their lapbooks.

To grade these lapbooks, I tend to use a simple rubric to make grading quick and easy.

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