What does "in residence" mean, exactly?
Fifteen years ago, when our family moved to Maryland, I applied to my state arts council's "Arts-in-Education" program. Through grants, often matched by a school's cultural arts budged, the program sends opera singers, playwrights, painters, bookmakers, mosaic artists, dancers, and others into schools around the state.
Some artists visit for a day, conducting assemblies. Artists-in-residence like me work with smaller groups, over a longer period of time.
The teachers and I have lost count of how many years I've been visiting Northfield -- at least eight. Instead of meeting with the whole school, I work with one grade: third!
There are five third grade classes at Northfield this year. Every day that I visit the school, I work with two different classroom groups.
The grant pays for a certain number of sessions. It works out to five workshops for each third grade class, a few meetings with the third grade educators, and a Poets Tea at the end of the residency.
At the Poets' Tea, we show off work like these third grade portrait poems in response to fine art. |
this week I make my first appearance as a regular children's poetry blogger at Michelle Heindrich Barnes blog, Today's Little Ditty! I'll cover the poet-in-the-schools angle. Other members of Michelle's poetry team include Renee LaTulippe, Buffy Silverman, and Carrie Clickard.
I love having a long-standing relationship with a school, where I return year after year. Older students see me in the hall and say, "It's the poet! I remember when you came to my class!"
We started this year's residency with Fibonacci poems, a form invented by Poetry Friday blogger Gregory K. Pincus.
If you'd like to check out my Fib workshop lesson plan, you can read it at this post.
Since we spend time talking about the Fibonacci math sequence and how it describes a pattern we can see in nature, I encourage the third graders to choose a scientific topic for their fibs. Today's poems are about plants and animals.
Plants
by Alastair
plants
life
green world
beautiful
soil, water, and sun
nature within the shining Earth
Green Earth, from NASA's Earth Observatory site. |
Untitled
AH!
Run!
Be scared.
Shark Attack!
They want to eat you.
It is not fun getting chomped up.
What I love about the Fib form is how it encourages stretching. The poet isn't simply building from one, two, and three syllables on a line to several syllables. As the poem develops, so must the complexity of thought. Watch how Emily uses this technique to build to a 13-syllable line.
by Emily M.
Green
Scales
Climbs trees
Camouflage
Lives in rain forests
Off ground, away from predators
Mysterious looking, thinking of a plan to escape
Meller's Chameleon, from National Geographic |
What an impact you must be making to have a student greet you like that, Laura! I think I'm just excited to have you in residence at Today's Little Ditty. :)
ReplyDeleteI can tell it didn't take these 3rd grade poets long to jump in with both feet either. Fabulous fibs!
Love your third-graders poems!!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Michelle and Buffy. The students are very excited to see their work posted online. Thanks for visiting and sharing a compliment.
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