Sheena Cameron, Louise Dempsey
The Poetry Book is a practical guide to teaching poetry. When students write poetry, it enriches their language and vocabulary, encourages creative thinking and develops reading, writing, speaking and listening skills. All students benefit from writing poetry but ‘at risk’ and reluctant writers can experience particular success from the creative but scaffolded nature of poetry.
The Poetry Book contains detailed information and fun activities that will encourage even the most poetry averse teacher to have a go!
Chapter 1 presents the guiding principles and practices for teaching poetry. The chapter begins by outlining the developmental stages of writing and the benefits of teaching poetry. Information on effective teaching strategies and catering for different learning needs is included. The chapter concludes with information about the knowledge and skills needed for poetry writing.
Read Chapter 2 for information about planning for poetry in a literacy programme. Ideas for how to develop a poetry culture in the classroom are outlined and the importance of talk in a poetry lesson is emphasised. A range of useful resources for poetry and a comprehensive list of ideas for topics are included.
Chapter 3 includes 36 mini-lessons to explicitly teach students the skills they need for poetry writing. Many of these skills transfer to other forms of writing. Subject knowledge for teachers is also included. Mini-lessons can be taught as part of the integrated poetry units in Chapter 5, before poetry Quick Writes, or to support the teaching of other writing forms such as narrative.
Poetry Quick Writes are short poetry lessons that focus on a particular poetry form. They can be used to add variety to a writing programme, as a one-off lesson or part of a more extended focus on poetry. Thirty-one Quick Write lesson plans and 36 exemplar poems are included in this chapter.
Chapter 5 includes five integrated poetry units that link shared reading lessons, mini-lessons and writing lessons. A set of high-impact teaching strategies is incorporated in all unit plans to scaffold success for all students including ‘at risk’ writers. The units include poem exemplars and other support material.
The final chapter emphasises the importance of sharing and celebrating poetry. It presents ideas for different groupings for students to respond to each other’s writing and includes a range of resources to support students to give effective feedback to each other, such as feedback frames and prompts. The last section of the chapter presents many engaging ideas for developing a love of poetry through performance, drama, art, publishing and music.
There are over 100 resources available to download, including poem exemplars, poem frames, word lists, templates, lesson slide shows and feedback frames.
Chapter 1: Introduction — guiding principles and practices
Chapter 2: Planning for poetry
Chapter 3: Teaching the skills for writing poetry
Chapter 4: Poetry Quick Writes
Chapter 5: Integrated poetry units
Chapter 6: Sharing and celebrating poetry
Resources
"The amazing duo of Sheena Cameron and Louise Dempsey has done it again with their latest wonderful literacy teaching resource, The Poetry Book. Packed with practical, inspiring ideas, the content is thoroughly grounded in research and fully tested in real classrooms. The knowledge and skill toolboxes form a simple organising structure to ensure that the complex task of teaching literacy is presented in a way that makes sense and is manageable for busy teachers. Lessons are presented in a format that is concise but informative, and offer pictorial examples, word charts, and explicit links to the reading and writing skills that will be developed through the study of poetry. With planning guidance, colour-coded sections and additional online resources, the book is indeed the ‘complete guide to teaching poetry’ that its title claims. This volume dovetails into all the other titles from The Literacy Place to build a timeless set of literacy resources that I use on a very regular basis in my practice."
- Robyn English, Leading Teacher, The Department of Education, Victoria, Australia