Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Spine Poetry 2015 Part 3

The last of the videos from our fourth grade poets:

Firebird

Pecos Bill

Throne of Fire

This isn't what it looks like

Jackpot

The black pearl

Arthur writes a story

Powerless


World War I

Under Wildwood (by Mrs. Lewis)

The Nobodies (by Mrs. Lewis)

We hope you enjoyed our poems! If you want to make your own, it's easy! First grab 4-5 books and line up the spines to make the lines in a poem. Then download the tellagami app and create your avatar. Finally, take a picture of your books and record yourself reading the titles as a poem. Then share it with a teacher or a parent or a friend!

Spine Poetry 2015 Part 2

More Spine Poetry videos:
Outcast

Most Wanted

The Lost Hero

Fish

Old Willis Place

The Son of Neptune

Ungifted

The Magic Half

Something Big Has Been Here

Dying to Meet You



Spine Poetry 2015

As Poetry Month came to an end and testing season closed, Mrs. Morphey and I let her fourth graders once again produce Tellagami Spine Poetry videos. First we watched last year's videos to learn what to do and what NOT to do when making their poems. Once again I was very impressed with how unique each poem was and how creative they are with the book titles.
Here are their creations (in no particular order):

Kelsey Green, Reading Queen

Ungifted

Flying Beaver Brothers

Frightful's Mountain

One Spooky Night

Seawatch

On the Run

NERDS







Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Toddler Story Time: Animal Poems



Disney Junior: "A Poem is... Ducks" by Mary Ann Hoberman; read by Owen Wilson

Today we enjoyed more fun poetry books about animals! Poems are so fun to read aloud, and are great for our little learners to hear and help read. The books we read from today were:
Quick as a cricket Quick as a Cricket  by Audrey Wood; illustrated by Don Wood

Bow wow meow meow : it's rhyming cats and dogs bow wow meow meow: it's rhyming cats and dogs by Douglas Florian

Eric Carle's animals, animals. Eric Carle's Animals Animals: "Mother Doesn't Want a Dog" by Judith Viorst and "Sparrow" by Kaye Starbird

We also had fun watching these fun videos:
Billy Collin reads poetry on "Martha Speaks"
Disney Junior: "A Poem is... Ducks" by Mary Ann Hoberman; read by Owen Wilson (see video above)
Miss Nina sings "The ants go marching" - and we marched right along with her, too!

Playing with rhymes and words is so much fun! try reading some nursery rhymes together this week and keep the celebration of Poetry Month going!

Until then, keep reading!




Monday, April 28, 2014

Spine Poetry Take 2

I love teaching a lesson multiple times! Each group brings a different dynamic, a new perspective, and a unique experience.  After a week of STAAR testing, two more classes of Fourth Graders came to the library ready to create poetry together.
I went over the process of picking out books to make a poem with book spines, showed them several examples, and previewed the tellagami app. Then I let them loose in the library to have fun!

These groups really had fun creating their avatars!



Their final poem videos were fun and creative. Since they had to make a group poem, I hope they all come back to the library and make their own soon!











































I love how easy tellagami is to use and learn! It is a great tool for students to know how to use.
On a side note... In creating my blog posts about their poetry creations, I have found 2 great apps that easily and quickly transfer videos and pictures from Apple devices to my computer. 
I have successfully used:
 Simple Transfer Pro by Rambax, LLC (2.99)

icon_transfer Image Transfer by Capable Bits (Free or 2.99)



Keep creating and sharing, everyone!

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Spine Poetry Day 1

After seeing Andy Plemmons' tweet about using Tellagami to narrate his students' spine poems, I decided to give it a try! I invited two fourth grade classes to the library to see what they could come up with from our shelves. 
When the students arrived at the library, I went over the purpose for their visit:

  • I explained that we would be creating poems using the spines of books to tell a story. I had created one, and shared with them my process of how I eventually came up with my stack of books.
  • I then showed them Andy's Tellagami video and talked about the books with the best titles to build their poems will be in the Fiction and Everybody sections. 
  • I only spent a few minutes going over the steps to make the Tellagami video of their poem and pointed out the areas of the library they should use to record their narration.
  • Then their teacher divided them into groups of 3 or 4 students to work together to create a group spine poem. We also assured them that the next time that they visit the library they would have more time to create individual spine poems, if they wanted to make one of their own.
I was so impressed with the focus of each group and how they worked together to decide if a title fit into the story they wanted to tell or not. Here's a few groups in process:
Choosing books from the Meadow Wood shelves

Creating avatars and videos

This was my finished spine poem:



And here are their finished videos:
























A few things we learned:
  • taking the picture in the app allowed you to line things up better
  • after setting the background you CAN move the avatar, which at first I told them could not be moved to the side any further
  • poetry is fun!
  • fourth graders are silly, sentimental, and creative!
I can't wait to see what some of these students create on their own!





Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Toddler Story Time: Poem Stories

I am in San Antonio enjoying time with my fellow librarians at Texas Library Association's Annual Conference. I left my friend Anna Farris with the task of entertaining my little friends this week with some fun Story Poems!

The books we read were:
My shadow My Shadow by Robert Louis Stevenson, illustrated by Monique Felix

Front Cover The moon by Robert Louis Stevenson, illustrated by Denise Saldutti

I see the moon and the moon sees me I see the moon and the moon sees me by Jonathan London, illustrated by Peter Fiore

 Wynken, Blynken, and Nod by Eugene Field, illustrated by Susan Jeffers