Monday, April 22, 2024

How Do I Love Thee, April? Let Me Count the Ways!

 Hey Lit Lovers!

Just a reminder that April is Poetry Month and National Shakespeare Day is on April 23rd - the anniversary of both William Shakespeare's birth and death! 

Celebrate verse and the Bard with this glorious Poetry Jumbo Bundle and Sonnet Writing Bundle for super fun and engaging reading/writing activities. (Students will love the Shakespeare Sonnet Insult Activity)!



You can also share these fascinating facts on Shakespeare: 

1) Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway, who was three months pregnant at the time.

2) Shakespeare’s parents were probably illiterate, and his children almost certainly were.

3) Shakespeare’s epitaph wards off would-be grave robbers with a curse.

4) Some people think Shakespeare was a fraud as there is a conspiracy that he didn't write his plays. 

5) Shakespeare had seven siblings. 

6) Shakespeare wore a gold hoop earring.

7) Shakespeare was a Catholic. 

8) Females were not allowed to perform on stage during Shakespeare's time. 

9) Shakespeare introduced 3,000 words to the English language. 

10) Shakespeare was an actor as well a writer. In fact, he played the Ghost in ‘Hamlet.'

With Literacy Love,

Kimberly 

Thursday, April 11, 2024

Celebrate National D.E.A.R. Day

D.E.A.R. Day, also known as Drop Everything and Read Day, is an annual celebration that takes place on April 12th. As the name suggests, this holiday is intended for everyone to dedicate a small or significant period during the day to reading. 




National D.E.A.R Day is also the birthday of the beloved author Beverly Cleary who created one of my all-time favorite childhood characters – Ramona Quimby.  On National D.E.A.R. Day, schools are encouraged to read together while promoting books as an integral part of daily life.

So how will you be celebrating D.E.A.R. Day?  Fun activities to do with family, friends, or an impassioned book club include making bookmarks, reading favorite passages, and acting out scenes.  Character charades, anyone?  While April 12th is official D.E.A.R. day, every day is a great day to Drop Everything and Read!  So take a literary timeout break today and get your read on!

Amazing Reading Facts:

1) Reading for six minutes a day reduces stress by 68%.   

2) According to many studies, regular reading is correlated with a longer lifespan.

3) Reading fiction can make you a better decision-maker.

4) The three books that have been read the most are: The Bible, Quotations From Chairman Mao Tes-Tung, and Harry Potter.

5) 'Bibliosma' is the word for loving the way books smell!

6) Adults who read for only 30 minutes a week are 20% more likely to have greater life satisfaction.

7) 19% of readers say reading helps them feel less lonely.


Need some D.E.A.R. Classroom Goodies?  
Click HERE

Wednesday, April 3, 2024

Embrace the Cosmic (Solar Eclipse) Dance With Poetry

Many of us stargazers are gearing up for the 2024 Total Solar Eclipse on Monday, April 8th!  What an amazing opportunity to integrate this sublime cosmic dance with verse.  (April is poetry month, after all)! 

In many spiritual traditions, the solar eclipse is seen as a time for introspection, reflection, and transformation. It is often associated with themes of endings, beginnings, and rebirth. Some people believe that a solar eclipse can actually evoke a spiritual awakening and heightened sense of awareness! 

In the same vein, the solar eclipse is a rare, wondrous event to reflect on our conscious and unconscious worlds, what we choose to shed light upon (and that which we keep hidden in the darkness) — and our relationship to the masculine and feminine forces in our lives.  Pretty deep, eh?  ...Cue the Milky Way Minstrels!  

Perfect poems to integrate into this celestial dance of light and dark/masculine and feminine energy are:   

"The Sun Rising" by John DonneThis poem personifies the sun and speaks to its power and omnipresence. Discussing this in the context of a solar eclipse can lead to interesting interpretations about the sun's temporary obscuration.

Haiku by Matsuo Bashō: Many of Bashō's haikus invoke nature and the changing seasons, capturing moments that can reflect the transient beauty of an eclipse. For a perfect example, read "A cicada shell; it sang itself utterly away..."

"Eclipse of the Sun" by William Wordsworth: Wordsworth, a central figure in the Romantic movement, often explored the profound impact of nature on the human spirit in his poetry. "Eclipse of the Sun" is no exception, capturing the awe and contemplation stirred by witnessing an eclipse. 

"At a Lunar Eclipse" by Thomas Hardy: Hardy's poem contemplates the vastness of time and space, and the human place within it, through the lens of a lunar eclipse. It can be interpreted as a meditation on the fleeting nature of human life and achievements against the backdrop of the eternal cosmos. 

"Do Not go Gentle into that Good Night" by Dylan Thomas: Although not directly about eclipses, this poem's exploration of darkness and light, and the fight against the dying of the light, can parallel the dramatic interplay of the sun and moon during an eclipse.




The integration of poetry into the experience of a rare solar eclipse serves as a reminder of the power of literature. It highlights poetry's ability to capture the ineffable and to connect us across time and space and the shared human experience. 

As the memory of the eclipse fades, the poems remain, ready to be revisited whenever we seek to reconnect with the wonder of that moment when day turned to night and the cosmos touched the earth.

Happy Solar Eclipse Day!  

Monday, April 1, 2024

April is National Poetry Month

April is National Poetry Month, the largest literary celebration in the world! 

Why should we devote an entire month to honor words written in verse?  Because poetry is the language of the soul.  When life drowns us with its dark moments, poetry throws us a raft – a verbal sanctuary of healing and beauty - especially during this unprecedented time of fear and uncertainty.

So I urge you to release your inner poet and succumb to the sensory language, rhythm, flavor, call and response of poetry.  Feel the human spirit and universality of life's shared stories in a stanza.  Read or write a poem this month.  Restore your spirit.  Restore your soul.


April Challenge:  Write a Cinquain

A cinquain is five line poem that follows this lyrical pattern:

1) a word for the title

2) two adjectives

3) three verbs

4) a phrase

5) the title again – or synonym


Examples:


Chocolate

Dark or milk

Smooth, silky, sweet

Best thing ever

Yum! 



Eyes

Large, mysterious

Watching, rolling, blinking

Tell more than words

Soul-windows



Cinquain

Short, sweet

Five, simple steps

Maybe not so easy…

Voila!




Students need a brain break?  Try a Poem Pause!   

By projecting a short poem, such as "Dreams" by Langston Hughes, students can have a silent reflection period where they read and ponder the poem.  After five minutes, students can share their noticings and wonderings - if they choose.  


Poem Pauses are "Power Brain Breaks."  They build community, reenergize the room, and allow the students to share moments of the soul through verse. 

Next time your students need a Brain Break, do a Poem Pause instead.  Along with April being Poetry Month, you may just inspire a poet or two!    


For more Poem Pause Inspo, click HERE 
and for Poetry Instructional Goodies, click HERE