ABSTRACT

This volume demonstrates how the social and instructional worlds that children inhabit influence their poetry writing and performances. Drawing on rich vignettes of students from different racial, ethnic and linguistic backgrounds, it describes and analyzes the work of eight to ten-year-old U.S. students involved in a month-long poetry unit. Children Writing Poems outlines the value of a ‘poetic-functional’ approach to help children convey a poem’s meaning and mood, and expresses the need for educators to scaffold children’s oral readings and performances over time.

chapter 1|7 pages

Introduction

“Eat-it-all Elaine” and Poetry Matters

chapter 3|8 pages

“Making the Familiar Strange”

Interpretive-Poetic Research

chapter 4|12 pages

Poems, Poets, Practices

Learning Through Engagement, Exploration, Mentoring and Collaboration

chapter 5|21 pages

Playing With Language

Poetic Features, Interdiscursivity and Intertextuality in Children’s Poems

chapter 6|20 pages

Delighting in the Ride

Poetic Structure, Interdiscursivity and Intertextuality in Children’s Poems