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  1. The Confessions of Henry Hooter the Third – And other fun poems for kids. Gabriel Rosenstock. Categories: Age 2-5 Years, Age 6-9 years, All FKB Books, Children, Gabriel Rosenstock, Grade 1 to Grade 3, Grade K and Pre K, Intermediate English, poetry.

  2. Mark my words. Give pupils a copy of the poem that they can mark. Encourage them to develop their own system to indicate emphasis, mood, pace and so on. TIP: It isn’t necessary to know a poem by heart before you start preparing for performance. Learning often happens naturally in the process of working on it.

  3. With this in mind I have selected some of my favourite children’s poems that are just fantastic fun to learn as a class and perfect for performing for others perhaps in a class assembly or spoken word event. As well as just learning for the sheer joy and enjoyment it brings, performance poems can have additional and powerful fringe benefits.

    • “They Flee from Me” by Sir Thomas Wyatt. What can attitude tell us? To help students find out, begin by asking who owns the action of each stanza in this poem.
    • “The Chimney Sweeper” by William Blake (1789) What can rhyme tell us? At the end of the 18th century, Blake wrote two scathing poems that denounce the abominable practice of exploiting very young children as chimney sweepers.
    • “The Chimney Sweeper” by William Blake (1794) What can point of view tell us? Five years later, Blake wrote a second poem about child chimney sweepers that appeared in Songs of Experience.This much shorter poem begins with the same rhyme scheme as the earlier poem.
    • “Jabberwocky” by Lewis Carroll. What can syntax tell us? Carroll’s Alice says of “Jabberwocky”: “Somehow it seems to fill my head with ideas—only I don’t exactly know what they are!”
    • Daniel Finds a Poem by Micha Archer. When Daniel sees a sign for “Poetry in the Park,” he asks, “What is poetry?” His experiences provide an answer, lots of sample poetic lines, and a great entry point into writing poetry for young students.
    • The Jackie Morris Book of Classic Nursery Rhymes by Jackie Morris. Share all the traditional nursery rhymes you remember from childhood with your young students with this beautifully-illustrated treasury.
    • One Leaf Rides the Wind by Celeste Mannis. Eleven poems set in the tranquility of a Japanese garden. This counting book introduces the haiku form of poetry to young readers.
    • A New Green Day by Antoinette Portis. Each turn of a page reveals the subject of a short but powerful verse about an item in nature. Lots of inspiration for students to write their own poems about nature in the same format.
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  5. May 1, 2013 · This book has a wonderful collection of poems to perform. Children will love these short poems which cover interesting and relatable topics for children. Children will have fun reading these alone or performing them to their friends. It is a great way to introduce young children to poetry and spark their interest.

  6. Apr 6, 2020 · The Poetry Foundation. The Poetry Foundation is a great place to find free poetry for kids. In its Children’s section of the site, the Foundation has comprehensive poetry coverage. Not only does the Foundation curate articles about children’s poetry, there is also a searchable database of 450+ poems for kid audiences.

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