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         Poetry Childrens Specific Poets:     more detail
  1. With a Poet's Eye: Children Translate the World by Mary Lynn Ellis, Jane McVeigh-Schultz, 1997-11-03
  2. Young Readers Responding to Poems by Michael Benton, John Teasey, et all 1988-11
  3. Struwwelpeter: Humor or Horror?: 160 Years Later by Barbara Smith Chalou, 2006-12-28

81. Poetry Power
Introducing poetry to children is a delightful essay by Charlotte Mason with some Jim Zola s wonderful article on poetry. Searching for a specific Poem?
http://kristinegeorge.com/poetry_power.html
Poetry Power! Ideas and resources for teaching poetry. Your contributions are always welcome! Scroll down or click on these quick links:
Ideas for Poetry Writing Exercises

A Wealth of Web Resources

Student Poets
— includes sites that publish young writers as well as writing advice
Children's Publishing
— helpful web resources on publishing children's literature Candle Flame
I've never forgotten the enchantment of writing poetry in a quiet classroom, lit only by flickering candles. Such a simple idea and so magical! (Thank you! to one of my favorite high school teachers Vicki Pierson at Corvallis High, Corvallis, Oregon) Art as Muse

Inspiration for poems can come from anywhere, including works of art and writing poetry in response to art is both challenging and exciting. I was asked recently to submit poems for two anthologies - one in which I chose the art and the other in which I was assigned a specific piece of art. I enjoyed both approaches. For Jan Greenberg's Heart to Heart: New Poems Inspired by Twentieth-Century American Art I was asked to choose a contemporary piece of art as the inspiration for my poem. Kiki Smith's "These Eyes" haunted me and the poem I wrote in response to Smith's art is titled "Pantoum for These Eyes."

82. Potato Hill Poetry/About Us
Massachusetts Science poetry Contest; A Celebration of poets The Student poetry Contest is for school age children enrolled in grades 412.
http://www.potatohill.com/contest.html
Contest Information
Information on how to
Get Published
Massachusetts Science Poetry Contest The contest encourages students in grades K through 8 to integrate science knowledge and activities with poetry writing and art. Deadline for sending student entries: April 15, 2004.
To receive a contest packet containing contest rules and information, send a self-addressed business size envelope with $.74 postage to:
Dr. George Ladd
Boston College
Lynch School of Education - Campion Room 122
Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 For more information call (617) 552-4229. A Celebration of Poets Students and adults are invited to enter. The contest has been sponsored by Creative Communication since 1993 and is used by teachers and parents to motivate young writers. Five separate divisions with 10 top winners in each division are offered. The divisions are:
Grades K-3, 4-6, 7-9, 10-12 and adult.
Deadline for sending entries: April 5, 2004.

83. Poetry
poetry Daily features a diverse selection of poets published in the English The Children s poetry Corner This site is an archive of the Web poetry
http://www.people.virginia.edu/~jbh/poetry.html
THE LITERARY WEB
Poetry
"I wish our clever young poets would remember my homely definitions of prose and poetry; that is, prose=words in their best order; poetry=the best words in their best order."
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Poetry is alive and well on the World Wide Web! There are many dynamic and accessible sites where both classic and contemporary poetry can be located. These sites include archives, online magazines and journals, and interactive poetry pages. Many of the sites include multimedia features that allow the browser to read and hear selections from a number of poets.
PoetsWest
A gateway to on-line information about poets and poetry in the Pacific Northwest.Includes information on special public poetry performances, venues with regularly scheduled poetry readings, a directory of Who's Who in Northwest poetry, poetry books and CDs, and links to poetry resources.
The American Verse Project
The American Verse Project is a collaborative project between the University of Michigan Humanities Text Initiative (HTI) and the University of Michigan Press. The project is assembling an electronic archive of volumes of American poetry prior to 1920. The full text of each volume of poetry is being converted into digital form and coded in Standard Generalized Mark-up Language (SGML) using the TEI Guidelines, with various forms of access provided through the WWW.
Cowboy Poets on the Internet
A collaborative project of a number of faculty and students of the Reynolds School of Journalism at the University of Nevada, Reno, and the staff of the Western Folklife Center in Elko, Nevada. Written out of a desire to share the rich culture of the West with the rest of the world, and to explore the powerful new media. The result is a web site that merges tradition and technology.

84. British War Poetry-WWI
And all the wonders poets sing, The laughter of unclouded years, And darkclothed children at play Called after kings and queens, The tin advertisements
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1914warpoets.html
Back to Modern History SourceBook
Modern History Sourcebook:
World War I Poetry:
Siegfried Sassoon
"How to Die"
Dark clouds are smouldering into red
While down the craters morning burns.
The dying soldier shifts his head
To watch the glory that returns;
He lifts his fingers toward the skies
Where holy brightness breaks in flame;
Radiance reflected in his eyes,
And on his lips a whispered name. You'd think, to hear some people talk, That lads go West with sobs and curses, And sullen faces white as chalk, Hankering for wreaths and tombs and hearses. But they've been taught the way to do it Like Christian soldiers; not with haste

85. Press Releases (CAC: News: Press Releases)
The poet shall also undertake a specific project that shall last through the 2000, and 2002) for several his books of bilingual poetry for children.
http://www.cac.ca.gov/?id=155&press=45

86. Compare Prices And Read Reviews On Poetry Videos & DVDs At Epinions.com
Dramas · Satire · poetry · Comedy · poets · Theatrical Release Comedies · Children s · Theatrical Release · Christmas · poetry · Holiday · PG
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87. English Language Arts 6-9: Sample Unit: Poetry Study
Children s poetry Anthology Have students assemble a collection of poems for young If possible, invite a poet to class to read his or her poetry.
http://www.sasked.gov.sk.ca/docs/mla/poetunit.html
Sample Unit Framework: Poetry Study
Unit Focus and Direction While it is important to include poetry in every unit of study, at times it can be fun to focus solely on poetry. During this unit (2-3 weeks), students are immersed in poetry. They speak, listen to, write, and read poetry, individually and in groups. This sample unit framework can be used to develop a unit of study for grade 6, 7, 8, or 9. Poetry is meant to be read, heard, and enjoyed, rather than "studied". Throughout the unit, read poems aloud daily and encourage students to read aloud poems of their choice. Ask students to respond to the words they hear and read in poems, and to picture the images that the words create. Students may say "I don't get it" and say that they do not like poetry because they are fearful that they do not understand the "correct meaning". Encourage discussion about the poems and the students' responses, making it clear that all responses are valid, and that each reader/listener makes meaning according to his or her own experiences and prior knowledge about poetry and the topic of the poem.
Learning Objectives The activities and resources suggested in this framework are appropriate for students in grades 6-9; however, it is important to select learning objectives from the curriculum guide that address students' particular grade level and needs. Be sure to select objectives for each of the language processes.

88. Top Picks Children's Poetry Books
Here s an annotated list of recommended children s books of poetry, including both Wellknown children s poet Jack Prelutsky did an excellent job in
http://childrensbooks.about.com/cs/poetry/tp/poetry.htm
var zLb=5; var zIoa1 = new Array('Related Guide Picks','Books that Celebrate America','http://childrensbooks.about.com/cs/poetry/tp/America.htm','Rhymes and Fun for Little Ones','http://childrensbooks.about.com/cs/boardbooks/tp/rhymes.htm','Mother Goose Rules!','http://childrensbooks.about.com/cs/boardbooks/a/mothergoose.htm','Books by Sharon Creech','http://childrensbooks.about.com/cs/authorsillustrato/tp/sharoncreech.htm','"This Place I Know: Poems of Comfort"','http://childrensbooks.about.com/cs/poetry/fr/comfort.htm'); var zIoa2 = new Array('Suggested Reading','Favorite Dr. Seuss Books','http://childrensbooks.about.com/cs/beginningreaders/tp/drseuss.htm','Spotlight on Jean Little','http://childrensbooks.about.com/cs/authorsillustrato/a/jeanlittle.htm','Spotlight on Sharon Creech','http://childrensbooks.about.com/cs/authorsillustrato/a/sharoncreech.htm','Spotlight on Candlewick Press','http://childrensbooks.about.com/cs/publishers/p/candlewick.htm'); zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'')

89. Erin's Poetry Links
poetry 4 Kids Created by children s poet, Kenn Nesbitt, this site is truly exceptional. Including poems by Kenn, there are also links to other poetry sites
http://www.cswnet.com/~erin/plinks.htm
Poetry and Literature Links
There are numerous sites on the web that profide useful poems and poet information. The following are several that I happened to enjoy. I have also added some literature links. Come back to this site often, because I hope to expand this list more in the future. Enjoy!!
Poetry Links

90. A (Kind Of) Turing Test
Ray Kurzweil s Cybernetic Poet creates original poetry and song lyrics, and the Poet s Children s scores on poem stanzas composed by a computer
http://www.kurzweilcyberart.com/poetry/rkcp_akindofturingtest.php3
Poetry by the Cybernetic Poet The Stifling Stuffy A haiku written by Ray Kurzweil's Cybernetic Poet
after reading poems by Patricia Camarena Rose and Wendy Dennis The stifling stuffy
Catholic schoolroom,
where I cannot be real. The Age of Intelligent Machines:
"A (Kind of) Turing Test" by Ray Kurzweil No ideas but in things.
William Carlos Williams As discussed in several of the contributed articles in this book, the Turing test was devised by Alan Turing as a way of certifying machine intelligence. Turing described a situation in which a human judge communicates with both a computer and a human using a computer terminal. The judge's task is to determine which is which. The judge cannot see the computer or the human and must make his or her determination by interviewing both. The computer attempts to trick the judge into selecting it as the human. The essence of the Turing Test is that the computer attempts to act like a human within the context of an interview over terminal lines. A narrower concept of a Turing test is for a computer to successfully imitate a human within a particular domain of human intelligence. We might call these domain-specific Turing tests. One such domain-specific Turing test, based on a computer's ability to write poetry, is presented here. The Kurzweil Cybernetic Poet is a computer program (written by the author) and provided with an input file of poems written by a human author or authors. The program analyzes these poems and creates a word-sequence model based on the poems it has just read. It then writes original stanzas of poetry using the model it has created. Some of the following stanzas of poetry were written by the Kurzweil Cybernetic Poet. Some were written by human authors (in fact the same human authors that were read and analyzed by the Kurzweil Cybernetic Poet). See if you can tell which are which. On a piece of paper, write down the numbers 1 through 28. Then put a

91. About The Position Of Poet Laureate (Library Of Congress)
The Poet Laureate Consultant in poetry to the Library of Congress serves as the She also championed children s poetry and jazz with poetry events.
http://www.loc.gov/poetry/about_laureate.html
@import url(../css/loc_poetry_ss.css); The Library of Congress Poetry Home > Poet Laureate
Related Resources at the Library
About the Position of Poet Laureate
Current Poet Laureate Poetry Room Past Laureates The Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress serves as the nation's official lightning rod for the poetic impulse of Americans. During his or her term, the Poet Laureate seeks to raise the national consciousness to a greater appreciation of the reading and writing of poetry.
Image of Archer M. Huntington
The Poet Laureate is appointed annually by the Librarian of Congress and serves from October to May. In making the appointment, the Librarian consults with former appointees, the current Laureate and distinguished poetry critics. The position has existed under two separate titles: from 1937 to 1986 as "Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress" and from 1986 forward as "Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry." The name was changed by an act of Congress in 1985. The Laureate receives a $35,000 annual stipend funded by a gift from Archer M. Huntington. The Library keeps to a minimum the specific duties in order to afford incumbents maximum freedom to work on their own projects while at the Library. The Laureate gives an annual lecture and reading of his or her poetry and usually introduces poets in the Library's annual poetry series, the oldest in the Washington area, and among the oldest in the United States. This annual series of public poetry and fiction readings, lectures, symposia, and occasional dramatic performances began in the 1940s. Collectively the Laureates have brought more than 2,000 poets and authors to the Library to read for the

92. T. Birch: Featured Poet
I have selected Tara as the featured poet of Tryst poetry Journal s Premiere Issue. TB My favorite poems are those I have done about my children.
http://www.tryst3.com/issue1/birchview.html
Tryst
Interview: T. Birch
Current
Past Submit Links ... Home
Tryst Interviews T. Birch As of June 2002, Tara, who publishes under the name T. Birch, has been writing poetry for a year. She says, "a friend of mine suggested I should try writing and invited me to an online poetry club. The more I wrote the more addicted I became to writing and reading poems." The release of Tryst this June will coincide with her anniversary as a poet. I have selected Tara as the featured poet of Tryst Poetry Journal's Premiere Issue. I have been following her work for several months now. Quite simply what drew me instantly to her writing was the intellectual intensity of her craft. Intellectual in the capacity that her topics provoke intense contemplation. A reader won't be able to skim through a poem of Tara's and think they have gleaned a meaning out of it. Tara's work requires some dedicated time to absorb and digest all that she presents with careful attention to every word, punctuation and formatting. Formatting is Tara's trademark. It is not only unique and unusual but there's always a sense that her structure is deliberate and well thought out. What one notices right away is a pattern that is always evolving. I have often remarked to Tara that her formatting is an added dimensionality to her work. All in all, what makes Tara's poetry so remarkable is that she is willing to explore every facet of the poetic craft. It doesn't stop with the words. I have also selected Tara to represent the MEA Award this year. MEA which is an acronym for the Muse's Endowment of the Arts. The MEA is essentially my personal endeavor to recognize and promote a new poet whose work is consistently good and fresh. This year I'd like to acknowledge Tara, the poet whose outstanding talent showed the greatest potential as a writer residing in the United States. I have no doubt that she will go far with her writing and I feel honored to have come across her poetry.

93. Just Curious - Language Arts - Poetry
ISLMC poetry for Children Come here to find information on all forms of poetry poetry4Kids - Popular children s poet Kenn Nesbitt shares his funniest
http://www.suffolk.lib.ny.us/youth/jclpoetry.html
Return to:
JUST CURIOUS
KIDS' SITES
PLACES FOR KIDS AND TEENS

SUFFOLKWEB HOME
Places for
Just Curious:
Poetry
  • Children's Haiku Garden - This beautiful collection is made up of haiku and illustrations done by children just like you! Edgar Allan Poe Society - Find biographical information of Edgar Allan Poe's life plus some of his fiction and nonfiction works. Favorite Poem Project - Video clips of poets reading their favorite poem, a forum for teachers and students, a favorite poem database and more. Fern's Poetry Club - Fern, of the "Arthur" series, presents her poetry club where you can learn about different types of poems and how to write them. Giggle Poetry - Learn how to write different types of poems and enter a poetry contest or rate poems written by other children. ISLMC Poetry for Children - Come here to find information on all forms of poetry KidzPage - This site has funny poetry and links for kids of all ages!

94. Classroom Projects: Garden-Inspired Poetry
Ask, What do you think the poet is observing in the poem? Recommended Children s poetry. If you don t already have favorite poetry to share with your
http://www.kidsgardening.com/growingideas/projects/nov04/pg1.html

Kidsgardening Home
Member Log-in Store Click here for printer-friendly version.
I mportant Note to Subscribers: As of January 2005, we'll be combining our two educator e-newsletters into a single mailing! Click here for details. This month . . .
Growing Poems
Cultivating Creativity and Communication Skills through Garden-Inspired Poetry
Though most school gardens are tucked in for the winter (except for those in the warmest climes), your students need not lose touch with plants, weather, insects, and other natural wonders. By reflecting on their gardening experiences through poetry, they can keep their gardens growing in their minds, maintaining a rich context for exploring phonics

95. Bringing The Margins To The Page, By Sue Katz
What I’m trying to do in that poem is shed light on child labor, As a poet, I am painfully aware that I have to be very specific in my language.
http://zmagsite.zmag.org/Mar2004/katz0304.html
March 2004
Volume 17 Number 3 FOG WATCH FORUM
Another World Is Possible, But Apparently Unimaginable
CHILDREN

Faint Hope For Nepal's Child Slaves
CONSERVATIVE WATCH

Bush's Faith-Based Parks
HOMELESS

Emergency Assistance Unit LABSOR
The New Unity Partnership
GRASSROOTS MEDIA
Caracas's Barrio Newswire INTERVIEW The New Crisis of Democracy HEALTH The Mad Cows Finally Come Home JUSTICE Guantanamo: A Right to a Fair Trial GREEN TIDE Global Warming as a Weapon of Mass Destruction FOREIGN POLICY Looting the Iraqi Economy PHOTO ESSAY The Story of Julio Cesar Gallegos Bringing the Margins to the Page BOOK REVIEW Ready for Revolution by Stokely Carmichael HOTEL SATIRE Performance Bringing The Margins To The Page By Sue Katz Printer friendly version S Def Poetry Jam Born Palestinian, Born Black

96. Suzanne Fields: Poetry On The Potomac
The new poet laureate is Ted Kooser, a retired vice president of the Lincoln Any parent who reads Dr. Seuss to young children discovers how quickly
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/suzannefields/sf20040819.shtml

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Fax 202-544-7330 Email us Advertise With Us *Advertisers may or may not share political views with Townhall.com. -Advertisement- More on Media and the Arts TV Review: 'Three Wishes' hosted by Amy Grant The Bride of Burton Who You Gonna Trust: CFIF or the Washington Post? More Today's Opinion Top Ten as rated by you Sunday Paul Jacob What's love got to do with it? George Will Marshall's legacy Doug Giles Riding the Storm Out Mark Tapscott Republicrats are taking care of each other in Able Danger Today's American Minute More Opinion Poetry on the Potomac Suzanne Fields archive August 19, 2004 Print Send We've got a new poet laureate. (Who can name the last one?) Poets can come from unlikely places. We got this one from a life-insurance company. The new poet laureate is Ted Kooser, a retired vice president of the Lincoln Benefit Life Insurance Co. in Nebraska. "Ted Kooser is a major poetic voice for rural and small town America and the first poet laureate chosen from the Great Plains," says James H. Billington, the Librarian of Congress. "His verse reaches beyond his native region to touch on universal themes in accessible ways."

97. SLCL Reference - Bibliographies - Poetry At The Library
Periodicals Children Teen Web Sites. Note Resources are not available at all poetry for Kids Award winning site by children s poet Kenn Nesbitt.
http://www.slcl.org/branches/hq/reference/bibliographies/poetry.htm
Title Author Subject Periodical Keyword Enter your e-mail address
Reference Department Information
Return to Bibliographies Poetry at the Library Finding Aids Anthologies Criticism and Biography
Periodicals
... Web Sites Note:
Resources are not available at all locations. Please check catalog for current holdings.
FINDING AIDS R 808.8
Annotated bibliography of better anthologies grouped by topic or audience. R 808.8
Classic guide to locating poems in anthologies by subject, title, first line or author. R 928
Contemporary Authors Cumulative Index

All in one index to this series and other reference works such as Contemporary Literary Criticism, Dictionary of Literary Biography and Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism. R 811.5
Guide to American Poetry Explication:
Colonial and 19th Century
Indexes articles and books containing criticism of specific poems by better known poets. R 811.5 Guide to American Poetry Explication: Companion volume to previous entry. Offers a comprehensive index of poetry explication from 1925 to 1987. R 050 Humanities Index Cumulative index to English language periodicals.

98. SuperPages.com - Enlighten Me
The fall poetry curriculum focuses on helping the children express themselves creatively and perform Did you have a favorite poem or poet as a child?
http://www.superpages.com/enlightenme/literacyleaders/archives/22_Paul_Caccamo.h
Enlighten Me Village Home PTA Literacy Leaders
Paul Caccamo
President of America SCORES
Paul, what is America SCORES?

America SCORES is a national nonprofit organization that inspires urban children to achieve excellence in literacy. If we consider the fact that 1 in 3 kids in inner-city public schools has fallen behind their grade level in reading and writing by 4th grade and that this statistic hasn't changed much in 20 years, we recognize the need for new solutions to this problem. America SCORES is a new solution. We use poetry, a genre of literacy that inspires kids every day through its popularity in music, hip hop and rap, and make it our starting point. Our teams of kids meet with a poetry coach after-school and explore their own capacity for sharing feelings, ideas and dreams through poetry. Working with trained public school teachers through our curricula, the students write poetry, perform poetry and publish poetry. And they take their sudden new appetite for vocabulary and words back into the classroom during the traditional school day.
The teacher talked to some teachers in other schools, raised some money and before the end of the year she had 4 teams of poet-athletes. Four years later the program was in 10 schools throughout the District.

99. Borzoi Reader | Authors | Franz Wright
Each time I read your poetry I feel deep emotions that don t dissipate with repeated I was stunned by the directness of your poem about child beating.
http://www.randomhouse.com/knopf/authors/franzwright/poetsonpoetry.html
The Beforelife Also available as a trade paperback

From the April 2001 Knopf Question-a-Poet Contest 1. Do you rely on inspiration to get you started on a poem, or do you have other ways to get going, and if so, what are those starting techniques? Barbara Blossom Ashmun "The inner clock of plants testifies to a deeper, measured tempo that counteracts our manufactured rush." Garden Retreats: Creating an Outdoor Sanctuary Franz Wright replies: 2. Each time I read your poetry I feel deep emotions that don't dissipate with repeated readings. I wonder, is it the same for you? How do you, the poet of such powerful pieces such as "Primogeniture," "November 14," "Thanks Prayer at the Cove," and "Written With a Baseball-Bat Sized Pencil," confront your own poetry? Does the emotion stay as raw and fresh for you with each reading? Or is this a phenomenon unique to the reader, you might say 'nur mir allein?' Joan Gold PS: I am a reading teacher in a public elementary school. You might be interested to know that your poem, "Primogeniture," was read to the 5th grade language arts class by their writing teacher. It was very well received. Hopefully this experience will impact their lives and those of their own children. Thank you for this thoughtful questionand it is awfully touching to know that a particular poem of mine reached some children in the fifth grade. (Incidentally, my mother-in-law is a reading teacher, so I found this especially interesting.)

100. National Poetry Month
Giggle poetry is the premier web site for humorous children s verse on the web. Oxford book of children s verse in America, PS586.3 .O94 1985. Poet s
http://www.mesastate.edu/msclibrary/instruction/pm.htm
National Poetry Month
April 2005
When a poem / speaks by itself, / it has a spark /
and can be considered / part of a divine / conversation.
" National Poetry Month " by Elaine Equi
National Poetry Month: Internet Links
Poetry Daily
Use this site from The Academy of American Poets to find poets and poetry, hear poems in the Listening Booth, and locate information about National Poetry Month, celebrated every April. Includes news; an index of major poetry publishers, periodicals, and distributors; an events calendar; and tip sheets on setting up programs, events, and classes. Poetry Awards is a list of major American poetry awards with recent recipients.
Giggle Poetry is the premier web site for humorous children's verse on the web. In addition, to being named to numerous educational and children's listings of top sites, Giggle Poetry has won many awards.
The site is devoted to a few experimental literary movements that tried to uncover some deeper truths about life. The site is currently designed around four main themes:

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