They Were Poetry

Last week, I began to sketch out the current poetry unit I am teaching in the seventh grade. I am still not ready to share the “paper work.” You now the objectives, essential questions, assessments, and criteria. I have it all planned out, but I don’t feel the need to document that part of the story on my blog just yet. I want the story of this unit to be like the work with my students; we are still trying to pry ourselves away from the literal. English is not their first language you see, so they are having a difficult time allowing language to set them free. They still cling to what they know and write exactly what they see. They cannot see that poetry is the key that will free them from the shackles of language acquisition.

Yesterday, we spent some time playing with metaphor, simile, and personification. We returned to the shared Google .Doc we created last week and began to explore the phrases we found there. I did not teach a lesson on figurative language or literary devices; I didn’t want to confuse them. I simply showed them how to do it and let them practice. I am starting to think this may be a better approach. There is no need to know what a simile is to write one, so why not practice first, get the hang of it and then say, “Oh by the way, what you just did there- comparing two things using the word like is called a simile, or see how you made the sun drink and laugh? That is called personification.”

We played on the document for about forty minutes. “Find a nice spot on the document and carve out your space. Take an idea and give it some life. Describe the flower or give the bee  a personality.” They are getting really mature about using a shared space like Google .Doc. At first there was a lot of giggling and erasing words and what not, but now we are all business. “We are not doing anything with this document for a while. We are not writing poetry. We are just describing the world. Don’t be afraid to take chances and be weird. Weird is good. Write what you think and let it flow out of you. Don’t think so much” I don’t want them to get caught up in the concept of poetry. I just want them to do it.

The next day, I handed out some photographs from a box I have called Poetry Starters. They are provocative sensory rich images, but nothing one couldn’t create from Flickr, and told them to practice what they did yesterday, which was to write freely using sensory language as well as personification, simile and metaphor. Of course, they do not know that is what they are doing. Most struggled. Many of them simply wrote exactly what they saw.  We  work on. I have done this before and know that it is a long haul, but we will slowly take one step at a time.

image by theilr

Next, we started a book called Love That Dog,

Love That Dog is the story of Jack, his dog, his teacher, and words. The story develops through Jack’s responses to his teacher, Miss Stretchberry, over the course of a school year. At first, his responses are short and cranky: “I don’t want to” and “I tried. Can’t do it. Brain’s empty.” But as his teacher feeds him inspiration, Jack finds that he has a lot to say and he finds ways to say it.

We just started it.  There is a a section early on when he is discovering rhythm and rhyme. As we read it lifelessly, I had an idea. A spontaneous revelation hit me,  so I ran with it. “I want this half of the class to read lines 1, 3, 5, 7 and this side to read 2, 4, 6, 8. Ahh come on you can read with more life and energy than that. Can’t you feel that? What is that called? Yes! Right! Rhythm, now feel it and read like you mean it.” We went back and forth, each time reading with more intensity. “Now follow me.” I started tapping out a beat on the table. They followed. “Come on louder! Don’t be shy. Beat that table. Feel that rhythm.” We were groovin’ now. “Good now read the poem and tap. Feel it don’t read it!”

It was awesome. They were smiling, laughing, reading, tapping. They were poetry. I quickly hit record on Garageband and recorded a take. Next class I want them to play on Garageband and experiment with beats, until they can record a nice tight little passage. Next we right a few lines of our own to read, sing, rap over the beat. Poetry is not a skill set to be learned and assessed. It is a lifestyle to be lived. We are on our way…

The Voice We Hear

Assignment #3 for #ds106 crept up on me, so much so I almost missed it. I will keep the text short and get to the actually product? Assessment? Art? Whatever we are calling it for this course. I think someone was calling it “awesome sauce.”

Part A: Readings

* Share (a.k.a. blog) your initial thoughts about the above readings and their relationship to one another (tag: web20readings ) and prepare to discuss in class (if applicable) and online in post comments of your classmates—so you best have setup aggregation by this point!

I chose to skip the blogging part of this assignment, as I don’t see the need for me to add more noise to the already existing conversations. I am coming into this course thinking that I want to deconstruct what is already out there and give the ideas new clothes. I did the reading, however, and would highly recommend reading the O’Reilly article. It is a manifesto of sorts for what the term Web 2. 0 actually means.

I took notes while I was reading and  chose to skin the text again and see what was at the core. Here is what I found:

the voice we hear in all of our heads
traditional stories trapped in  beginnings, middles, and ends
a head, not the tail, a center, not the edges.

open-ended stories freed by,
collective intelligence,
reflection of conscious thought,
the global brain as powerful effects.

free exchange fundamental to the common good.

branching out,
a tail, not the head,
edges, not a center.
hyperlinked, cross-media, participatory, exploratory, and unpredictable.
gets better the more people use it.

built-in cooperation,
stronger synapses through repetition and intensity,
connecting the edges
The “echo chamber” as amplifier.
bring your own resources to the party
blur the boundaries…

Then what? I wanted to push myself and move beyond another poem. I wanted to give the words some life, so I opened up Garagband found some Creative Commons licensed music from Trent Reznor, watched Alec Couros’ Ted Talk, grabbed some gold, and started to play.

Part B: Playing

After you have read and consider the above essays, distill a few key points and use one of the well over 50+ tools from Alan Levine‘s “50 Web 2.0 Ways to Tell a Digital Story” to try and communicate those ideas in an experimental way using a Web 2.0 tool. Make sure the tool you use lets you embed the project in your blog.

Here you go:

the voice we hear

Apple Distinguished Educators – Class of 2011

A few minutes ago, I officially sent off my application to become an Apple Distinguished Educator. Some of you may be asking why? I guess it boils down to this:

After reading the description-

The Apple Distinguished Educator (ADE) program is a select group of K-12 and Higher Education professionals around the world possessing an identified expertise in educational technology leadership. ADEs are trusted advisors on the realities of integrating technology into learning environments; passionate advocates for the potential of innovative technologies to engage and empower students; authentic authors who share best practices for the advancement of teaching and learning; and global ambassadors who empower each other to expand the walls of the classroom to provide global experiences. This group of over 1,500 educators spans the globe with membership in the USA, Asia, Australia, Canada, Europe, Japan, Mexico and New Zealand.

I thought to myself, “I can do that. I do do that!” So why not get the title, the training, and the opportunity to learn with other dedicated teachers around the world. I won’t find out whether or not I get in until March, but I am hoping I do, because the first training and ceremony session is in Bali. You can read about what this distinction actually entails, mostly workshops, presenting and getting extra training in all things Mac, on the website. In order to apply I had to answer some questions and create a video.

I am quite please by how it turned out, and I was told that it is okay to share before the announcements are made. So wish me luck and tell me what you think!

Keep The Flow Going

My mind is on fire. I am in the flow. I can’t stop thinking. My body tingles with learning. I am awash in artistic and intellectual juices. A bit much? Sure, but I am loving this feeling. I am drunk with the excitement generated by my mind and its connection to so many things, ideas, places, and people. Let me quickly walk you through my morning. Warning there will be many links. Do not be lazy, take a second and at least open them and skim around.

I woke up around 5:45 am as I do everyday and took a quick inventory of my online life. Checked some Tweet, read some emails, and followed up on comments and links to my posts and of course checked to see if anything exciting is happening on Facebook. (Not really by the way. Why is Facebook always the dullest part of my online life? Facebook friends, one of you, if you are here by some fluke leave a comment, join the conversation. Jump in please I beg of you!)

I was so excited to see a few Tweets and links to this post by Brian Lamb, in which he and a few other members of #ds106 had taken the poem I had written using Gardner Campbell’s talk and turned it into a song. Read the comment thread for my thoughts on that.

I then moved on to a few blog posts by Alan Levine and D’Arcy Norman that had me in a fog of thought for most of the day. Again follow the comment threads for my attempts to articulate my ideas.

Finally, once in school, I got into a nice little discussion about the usefulness of PowerPoint as a tool, the philosophical differences between telling stories and sharing information, and the general state of the perpetuated stench of habitual teaching.

And that’s all before lunch. I have already taught a class, pushed into another, and tried to wrestle about ten different  ideas into this post. It is exhausting, but also very exciting. I would give my left foot if I could ever generate this kind of enthusiasm about learning with my students!

That’s it huh? The big question: How do we get learners excited about learning? Rather than pontificate or pull up research, let me just share some stories about how and why I am so excited today:

Sorry about the audio. Apparently photobooth not only doesn’t play nice with Blogger, but Youtube as well. Lesson learned.

As I was saying, I am also excited by the fact that I am actively involved in a differentiated environment. And by being so, I am able to understand better what it feels like for my students….

Sorry about the audio. Apparently photobooth not only doesn’t play nice with Blogger, but Youtube as well. Lesson learned.

Whoo! I think I got most of it out. I needed to jettison that intellectual weight; I feel much better. So what do you think about anything I said. Jump in, let’s keep the flow going.

To Instigate Similes

After writing a few reflections on the units I covered last term, I realized that summative reflection could become a tedious chore that doesn’t serve much of purpose. This term I would like to work on writing shorter more formative reflections to help me stay connected with my units, and that will hopefully illicit some useful feedback from you, dear reader.

This term I am working on a unit of poetry with my grade seven Language B class. Two other teachers are working on a similar unit and we are co-planning the big ideas and objectives, but choosing to “get there” on our own. I will share unit overviews, assessments, and objectives in the next post. I wanted this initial post to be a bit more organic and free-flowing.

Poetry is important to me. Not as a unit that must be covered in English, but as a lifestyle. I see poetry as a vital tool in helping people live better, happier, more expressive, artistic lives. I see poetry not as a tool, but as a way of seeing, as a manner of being. Either you see the world figuratively, metaphorically, artistically, poetically, or you see it as it is.

I told my students that all children begin leading lives of poetry, but somewhere along the way we beat that imagination out of them and tell them that the sunshine doesn’t smell like lemon drops; it doesn’t smell like anything. How could it?  My job, as I see it, is to remind them that reality is only what we say it is, when we live poetically.

I know that in the next few weeks,  I will spend a lot of time giving inspirational speeches about the wonders of poetry and the artistic view of life. After our initial chat, I share a few clips from Dead Poet Society, and remind them what it means to Yawp! They are in 7th grade and don’t speak much English, but everyone can appreciate the power of a barbaric Yawp!

The next day we took our laptops outside. I am lucky enough to work on one of the most beautiful campuses I have ever seen. I created a shared Google Doc with the kids and told them to find a quiet place to sit alone and observe their world. I told them to write down words or phrases based on their sense. I didn’t ask for a poem, just basic observations.

I wanted them to take a close look at the world around them. I joked that so many times we just walk past everything and never really experience the world unless it is on a screen, and so I wanted them to enter the moment. This is a good time to stop and reflect on the use of technology in general.  So many times we spend all our time and energy thinking about the tech that we lose site of what it is we are learning. I could have easily asked them to scribble their thoughts on paper, but I wanted them to see what others were writing. I wanted the Google Doc to be the space we all met to share what we saw. I knew that it would encourage those who were stymied.We will use this document later to create a shared poem.

I watched them scatter across what we call Peace Park, and then the Google Document came to life! I wish I would have taken a screen video, as it was cool to watch, but I was ill prepared so I watched as it slowly began to write itself instead. I would add suggestions from my perch on a hill. I usually just asked for more details or added the words, “like a…” to instigate similes.

Then I walked around, took photos, talked to kids, and made sure they were on task by asking questions:

  • What does that soil smell like?
  • What would these statues say if they could talk?
  • What can that digger also be…a monster! Good, what is it doing? Eat bones! Great

I was surprised to see that nearly everyone was on task. They could have been on Facebook or messing around with games, but they weren’t. I couldn’t be bothered to be the cop; if they were off task than they would suffer later.

Next day, after I had edited my photos I showed them to the class. They couldn’t believe the way I had captured the very same things they had been looking at. I explained that poetry is the ability to look closely and share reality using language. I told them that before they worry about words, they have to learn to look at life poetically and that starts with being open to anything and getting your hands dirty. We spoke about the gardeners on campus and class and poverty and struggle. We talked about nature and beauty and fear.  We looked at photos and we talked.

Today, I shared another talk with them. It has been paraphrased, and I wish I had recorded it, as they appeared engaged and mesmerized. As I made eye contact across the room, they seemed to be understanding:

When we are children we are free and open and courageous. We let our minds and hearts dance out in the open unafraid of judgment or evaluation. (The language I used in class was much simpler, forgive me as I flex my chops a bit here.) We draw purple trees and imagine that all objects are personified and bathed in metaphor. There are no wrong answers, no lines, no rules. That is until the first person laughs at us, or the first teacher says, “Now draw within the lines,” or our parents say that is great, but there are no monsters or unicorns. At this stage usually around the age of five we begin to build a wall around ourselves. Every year, every experience that goes sour forces us to add another brick. Until by the time we are thirteen, your age, we can barely see what the world looks like. We sit alone in our newly built cells afraid to look outside. Unaware that other imprisoned children are also sitting alone in their walled cells wondering where the magic went.

Most of us never stop building these walls. Look at the adults in your life. I bet you are amazed by the size of their walls. They rarely smile, dance or create anything beautiful. They worry and argue and stress and yell. It is frustrating to live alone behind walls.

I tell you this because as a child I had many terrible things happen to me. Now is not the time to share those details, but I got really good and making my wall. I built it fast and tall and strong. I hid there alone for a long time. Until one day I found a way out! This way out is what I want to teach you. Deconstructing the wall is our unit of inquiry this term.

So there you have it. You are caught up to where we are now. Today I had them find a quiet place in the room and write a blog post based on the following questions:

We are starting to study poetry in my English class and I…….

  • What do you think about poetry so far?
  • What did you think about being outside the other day?
  • What did you think about the photographs?
  • What did you think about what I was saying yesterday about “walls?” What did you understand? What questions do you have?
  • Do you agree that people are scared to open up? How can we change that?
  • What do you hope to learn about poetry?
  • What do you hope to learn about yourself?

They wrote without incident or distraction for an hour straight. I will share what they wrote after I have read their posts. I’ll also talk more about summative assessment and more.

So tell me: How do you get middle school students excited about poetry? What tricks do you have?