Below is the poetry assignment I did with my kindergarten class.
Title Page:
Assignment
learning-context-poetry-assignment
Analysis
Student poetry rubric
Examples of student poetry
Mrs. Hand’s kindergarten bulletin board of I Poem’s

Below is the poetry assignment I did with my kindergarten class.
Title Page:
Assignment
learning-context-poetry-assignment
Analysis
Student poetry rubric
Examples of student poetry
Mrs. Hand’s kindergarten bulletin board of I Poem’s

I really enjoyed seeing and listening of multigenre projects. I have never seen so many different ideas and creativitiy capturing so many multigenres. I gathered so many ideas as to how to motivate students to write and read. I have implemented this in my classroom with “I” poems, wordless picture books, research,journals, and hands on activities. The thouroughness of the projects was awesome. By viewing everyones multigenre projects I feel that I am better at my teaching techniques and have so many more ideas as to how to motivate my students to become better readers and writers. The presentations were interesting and really enjoyable for listening. I have learned so much, another area I didn’t cover about my project was the fact that I have a student in my class who is diagnosed with lukemia. He just returned from Disney World through the make a wish foundation. This touches my heart because just last year, my daughter did an intern at Walt Disney World. A friend of ours had a 5 year old who was diagnosed with cancer. My daughter arranged for her to visit Disney at no cost. Make a wish is a wonderful assistance for sick children and Walt Disney would have loved to have seen these children’s faces as they attended the Magic Kingdom.
Getting back to multigenres, I saw examples of diaries, dialogues, journals, timelines,poetry,memoirs, biographies,dictionaries, and the list goes on. I think everyone did a great job implementing different sources and genres.I learned about Sarah Winchester, Paula Dean, obesity, mail order brides, civil war, civil rights, and so many I can’t count them all. I will remember what I saw and the multigenre is the way to go.
This has to be the most time consuming project I have ever undertaken. I had intense moments to where I felt like crying but I would suck it up and continue. I planned, wrote, and revised so many times my head ran in circles. I am relieved this project is over. Now let’s get it on my blog. Great job everyone!!! A stressful job well done.
It is true that children need motivational techniques in order to produce thoughts onto paper. After reading Chapter 3, I found that the stages children develop over the years can be bridged together through the elementary grades. I agree the children need to know their artisitic and language abilities in order to produce a well written paper. I need more detail as to reaching lower level writers. Being a kindergarten teacher, I feel I am the foundation that the later years are scaffolded upon. I agree that pictures are a necessity for all writings. I have found that my students who draw pictures first then label objects second then begin writing do a very nice job completing assisgnments. I would like more in depth lesson plans for delivering these objectives.
In reference to wordless picture books by Cassady and Reese,it’s nice to know that all objectives can be reached through wordless books. Wordless books gives the mind room to breathe and interpret ideas without being read the words in the book.This gives the students the opportunity to focus on language and not the content. I use “The Snowman” wordless book every year in my classroom. The students love this picture book and when I show the movie they are interpreting the video in their own minds sharing ideas with each other. Callaboration is the key to motivating students to produce what they are thinking. We all know without a strong reading environment children will not do as well. They are more reluctant to accomplish an objective due to frustration. These students need major support from peers and 1-1 tutors so they can accomplish writing techniques and feel comfortable in their environments. I agree that a wordless book can tell a story twenty different ways in a child’s mind. The art is for the teacher to get the objective accomplished no matter how difficult the diversity or language experience may be.
What is multigenre writing? Well, from the research I have done, multigenre writing at its best is combining what you know through research and combining your imagination through experience. Then you combine genres, some subgenres, and generate a text through writing not just from an author’s perspective but from impressions that these different genres leave on a person emotionally and cognitively.
Most of the readings in Writing Without Boundaries are explaining how to present these genres to different grade levels effectively. This is not a project that can be introduced without proper research by the teacher. Careful planning of appropriate genres per objective is a necessity.
This project should include small group investigations, exploration of genre samples, shared reading of genre examples, comparisons and definitions. For example, I plan to introduce Walt Disney to my kindergartners. Walt Disney was a fascinating man and although he is deceased, his fairy tales live on through the magnificent Walt Disney World Resort as well as the literature that he published.
First, you pick a person, place, event, or concept when planning a multigenre project. I have already picked a person but I want to tie in other information such as books and movies. My students will investigate through shared readings the life of Walt Disney. I hope to find brochures, newspaper articles, fairytales, poems, and music related to this topic. I want to eventually combine these genres but focus on related fantasy characters that Walt Disney created. The purpose of this project is to inform and educate students that a real person created these wonderful characters that we have all come to love over the years. Can I do this?? Am I on the right track? Am I making this assignment too hard? Any input will be greatly appreciated. These are just a few thoughts for this project. The project is still under investigation and is a work in progress.
This is an “I” poem about water. The book Atlantic written by G. Brian Karas inspired this poem. Click on the link to view. Water
Here is an Acrostic poem about Abraham Lincoln. Click on the link to view. Acrostic Poem
My favorite poem is Sarah Cynthia Sylvia Stout Would Not Take The Garbage Out by Shel Silverstein. Click on the link to read the entire selection.
On this page I have a found poem. Click on the link to view. Found Poem
On this page I have a concrete poem. Click on the link to view. Basketball concrete poem
I liked this article because students become the narrator, expressing thoughts and feelings from a narrators point of view.The “I” poems do not have to rhyme or have any formats to follow. Poetry is a way of transforming readings to the written form giving the students opportunities to express themselves from a perspective other than their own. I use a big poem for every month. The poem is on chart paper the size of a big book. Every morning we read this poem, then the line leader reads the poem by themselves. The poem for this month is an “I” poem. It’s repetitive and teaches book and print, punctuation, first word, last word on page, etc. I like the idea of reading a story and the students engaging in writing an “I” poem to enhance plot, characters, and setting. Today we read Froggy’s First Kiss and wrote our own Valentine poems and mailed them in our class mailbox. Since this is kindergarten, the poems where quite simple, but the feedback from the planning during group was wonderful letting me know they had captured Froggy’s feelings, emotions, and realized why he acted as he did. Again, this article helped me give other alternatives to writing.