Back in 2001, the Favorite Poem Project in
collaboration with Boston University's School of Education established The Summer
Poetry Institute for Teachers. Here is an excerpt from the announcement:
(Boston, Mass.) —
Robert Pinsky, one of the most celebrated and visible poets to serve as U.S.
Poet Laureate, and Boston University’s School of Education will present a
week-long poetry institute to revive poetry’s place in the classroom. The
Summer Poetry Institute for Educators, from July 9 to 13, stems from the
Favorite Poem Project, Pinsky’s special undertaking as poet laureate. The
institute will train elementary, middle and high school teachers and
administrators in Massachusetts to incorporate poetry into vibrant classroom
activities...
The summer 2001
institute will serve 50 participants — teachers and teacher/administrator teams
— at the elementary, middle and high school level. The five-day program will
teach the founding principles of the Favorite Poem Project: that poetry is a
vocal, physical art meant to be read aloud and that people forge personal
connections to poetry. The curriculum will expose teachers to a broad range of
poems and to various ways of reading and teaching poetry.
Peg Voss Howard,
our language arts director and the author of Hidden Literacies: Children Learning at Home and at School, and I
decided to apply as the team from our school district. Each of us had to write up
rationale for wanting to participate in the poetry institute. Here is what I wrote
on February 12, 2001:
The Importance of
Poetry for Children
I have spent over
three decades in an elementary classroom. In that time, I have come to
understand that what I value as a teacher has an impact on what my students
will come to value. I have a real passion for poetry. I read it, I write it,
and I have collected more than two thousand poetry books. My love of poetry has
influenced many of the students I have taught.
At the end of every
school year, I receive letters from both students and parents. In their
personal notes, many of the writers make some reference to poetry, In 1989, a
mother wrote to tell me how I had instilled in her daughter a finer
appreciation of poetry. "When Kate sits in our window and responds to the
moon and stars by writing her own poetry, I glow with happiness." Another
year, one mother wrote: "Thank you so much for helping Alex to discover
his 'new eyes' in your class. Your love of poetry and music has enriched him
and I am so delighted to see him read with a record on--enjoying his
senses!" Sam, an athletic boy one might not think would enjoy poetry,
wrote: "...And I love the poems you read to us." Little Tiffany
wrote: "Thank you. I learned a lot. Let me sing a poem."
Poetry does sing to
children. My students take joy in its rhythm, its rhyme, its clever wordplay
and alliteration. I share with them the works of dozens of poets from Lewis
Carroll, Eleanor Farjeon, Carl Sandburg, and Langston Hughes to David McCord,
Myra Cohn Livingston, Valerie Worth, and Arnold Adoff. I find that immersing my
students in fine poetry gives them a true sense of what poetry is. They begin
to internalize poetic elements and to develop an appreciation for figurative
language, imagery, and metaphorical thinking.
Our children live
in a fast-paced world of ever-changing technology. They are often hurried and
harried. There are also increasing demands on educators to prepare students for
standardized tests. What we often find in short supply is time. Our young
people today need time--time to reflect and to look inward, time to get in touch
with their feelings and emotions. We must teach to the heart as well as to the
mind so that our students come to a deeper, more personal understanding of what
they are learning and of the world they inhabit.
Over the years, I
have witnessed how the reading and writing of poetry with children helps them
to reach inside themselves, to unlock original ideas and thoughts, to verbalize
their inner feelings, and to find their own unique voices. It is always so
rewarding for me when a student finds a poet or a special poem that speaks to
him in a personal way or sings to his own individual rhythm.
We must establish a
climate in our schools where poetry is welcome. We must understand and value it
in order to inspire an appreciation for it in our students.
**********
BOOK GIVEAWAY
I'll be giving away
a copy of GREAT MORNING: Poems for School Leaders to Read Aloud by SylviaVardell and Janet Wong. Janet autographed the book for me. It's a poetry book
every teacher and school librarian should have.
To be entered into the drawing for the book, all you
have to do is to comment on any of my Wild Rose Reader posts that I publish
from April 8th through April 13th. I'll announce the winner on Sunday, April 14th.
1 comment:
You and I are kindred souls, Elaine. I love this post. Janet Clare F.
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