Read Dorothy Sayers: "The Lost Tools of Learning".

Thursday, February 26, 2009

1836 First Eclectic Reader: Lesson XXXII. - Little Lucy.

Do you like to read? Can reading be as fun as play? What is so good about reading? Create a list of adjectives describing why it is good to read. The list should have atleast four adjectives.


Little Lucy.

Lucy, can you read? Yes sir, I can. Would you rather read than play? Yes sir, I would, because mama tells me that play will not be of any use to me after I am grown. If I love to read, I will be wise and good. A little boy or girl who can not read is not much better than Puss. Puss can run and play, as well as they. Puss can never learn to read. Boys who do not know how to read can not learn anything, but what is told to them. When a boy of girl knows how to read, they can sit down and learn a great deal, when there is no one to talk to them. After boys and girls have learned to read, they can learn to write. Then they can send letters to their friends, who live far away.



Vocabulary.

know, cannot, because,
friends, mama, away,
much, rather, letters,
learned, better, and never.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Poetry Lesson 1: The Haiku


Poetry Lesson 1
There many different types of poetry: Haiku, Ballad, Sonnet, Blank Verse, Free Verse, Ode, Limerick, Sestina, Narrative, Dramatic Monologue and Villanelle.






Haiku

Today we are going to talk about the Haiku. Haiku
is a type of poetry that doesn't rhyme from the Japanese culture. Haiku combines form, content, and language in a meaningful, yet compact form. Haiku poets write about everyday things. Many themes include nature, feelings, or experiences. The most common form for Haiku is tree short lines. The first line usually contains five syllables, the second line seven syllables, and the third line contains five syllables (5,7,5). Haiku A Haiku must "paint" a mental image in the reader's mind. This is the challenge of Haiku - to put the poem's meaning and imagery in the reader's mind in just 17 syllables over just three lines of poetry! You can also write Haiku with three syllables in the first line, five syllables in the second, and three again in the third (3,5,3); for those who think they can be more concise.
Here are some examples of Haiku:

The Rose by Donna Brock
The blossom bends
and drips its dew on the ground
Like a tear it falls.

By Natsume Soseki
Over the wintry

forest, winds howl in rage
with no leaves to blow.

Exercise:
1. See if you can find some Haiku poems (look for about 3).
2. Write a Haiku poem yourself, one with 3 lines of 5,7,5 and other with 3 lines of 3,5,3.

First level Recommendations:

Second Level Recommendations:

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Sixth Level Recommendations: