Professional performance poet! MA in Writing/Education and residencies at various schools. Books published by Bloomsbury. Sharing my poetry, students' work, and miscellanea. Blog posts not always child friendly.
Monday, 18 November 2019
FABULOUS POEM BY YEAR 4, TWYFORD SCHOOL
I'm delighted to share these group poems, written by Year 4 classes on the back of my recent visit to Twyford School. It is easy to write a poem like this: think of a special person, and describe them using metaphors. Enjoy!
Tuesday, 12 November 2019
POEM FOR ANTI-BULLYING WEEK 2019
Max Is Not in School
Today the sun shines
a little bit brighter.
Today the wind has lost
its bite, and the air
hangs less heavy
in the classroom.
Today Max
is not in school.
Today my ears are not stung
by barbed words.
Today my ribs don’t tighten
in my chest
as taunts lash out
across the playground.
Today my books
are in my bag
and not torn up and scattered
across the floor.
There’s a small oasis
in the wide parched desert;
a faint rainbow
in the winter storm.
Today I can breathe
just for a while
because Max
is not in school.
Saturday, 9 November 2019
FIREWORKS - simple idea for KS1
Here is a fantastic poem written recently during one of my workshops in Key Stage One:
Writing a firework poem is very simple, and can be achieved in the following three steps.
(1) write down five different colours
(2) develop these into similes
(3) intersperse each line with some onomatopeia (e.g. 'whoooosh!')
Why not give it a go?
Wednesday, 6 November 2019
POEM FROM INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL, FLORENCE
I recently spent a fantastic couple of days visiting the International School in Florence. I am delighted to be able to share the following wonderful poem, which was produced during one of my workshops. I often ask workshop participants to describe a person they love using various objects as metaphors, such as I do in this poem here. The interesting thing about the student's poem was the way he inverted my idea, and kind of took it off in his own direction. I love it when this happens! Here is the poem:
Actually, the poet crossed out the last line, but I thought it worked really well so am including it here. And, for good measure, here is the view from the classroom in Florence:
YOU by Marco
You are the virus
to my laptop;
You are the bacteria
to my health;
You are the storm
to my sailing boat;
You are the homework
to my summer;
You are the ISF
to my bank account
but I love you.
Actually, the poet crossed out the last line, but I thought it worked really well so am including it here. And, for good measure, here is the view from the classroom in Florence:
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