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- Haiku and photography: A natural connection
- This lesson will allow students to combine photographing nature with creating a Haiku poem to express what they see in the photograph.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 3–4 Visual Arts Education and English Language Arts)
- By steven sather.
- Nature journaling: A new way to enjoy nature
- Nature journaling is a way to record and re-create an image experienced in nature. By combining drawing and writing, the student uses their senses to record what they feel, see, hear and touch at a particular point in time.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 3 Visual Arts Education and English Language Arts)
- By steven sather.
- Slipsliding poetry
- Students will work with a partner to write an original piece of poetry to express information learned about the rain forest and an animal that lives in that habitat. Students will share their poems by creating a multimedia slide show.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 4 English Language Arts and Science)
- By Angela Hodges.
- Asia
- Learn about the history, cultures, and geography of the nations and peoples of Asia from this sampling of great educational resources that can be found on LEARN NC.
- Format: bibliography/help
- Dance of the times: African-American expression of jazz
- Explores jazz dance as a social dance form and a uniquely expressive art of African-American culture from the 1920's and 1930's. Students will learn about the complexity of African-American experiences that generated the dance and musical style. The activities develop students' understanding of jazz dance while integrating visual, audio, and kinesthetic learning styles.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 6–8 Dance Arts Education)
- By Shelese Douglas.
- Write on!: Hooking the reader
- Students will recognize new and innovative ways to write a narrative by discovering various ways to "hook" the reader with catchy beginnings and using figurative language and writing components to write an interesting story.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 4 English Language Arts)
- By Tina Duckwall.
Resources on the web
- Children's Haiku Garden
- An invitational gallery of haiku verses with illustrations from Japanese children and other children from countries around the world. Haikus are all in English. (Learn more)
- Format: website/general
- Provided by: Ryo Suzuki
- The world of Haiku
- Students explore the traditions and conventions of haiku, comparing this classic form of Japanese poetry to a related genre of Japanese visual art and composing haiku of their own. (Learn more)
- Format: lesson plan (grade 7 and 9 Visual Arts Education, English Language Arts, and Social Studies)
- Provided by: National Endowment for the Humanities
- Can you haiku?
- Haiku poems show us the world in a water drop, providing a tiny lens through which to glimpse the miracle and mystery of life. Combining close observation with a moment of reflection, this simple yet highly sophisticated form of poetry can help sharpen... (Learn more)
- Format: lesson plan (grade 3–5 English Language Arts)
- Provided by: EDSITEment
- Oceans: A fact haiku
- This ARTSEDGE lesson uses the ocean to teach students about a form of Japanese poetry. After learning and hearing haiku, students listen to the sounds of the ocean to inspire them in writing their own haiku. This resource contains links to a related lesson... (Learn more)
- Format: lesson plan (grade 3–4 English Language Arts)
- Provided by: ArtsEdge
- Seasonal haiku: Writing poems to celebrate any season
- After students are familiar with the parts of speech, they work in groups to create lists of words that describe seasons. The teacher then reads aloud several examples of haiku poetry. Using the lists of seasonal descriptive words, students write their... (Learn more)
- Format: lesson plan (grade 3–5 English Language Arts)
- Provided by: ReadWriteThink
- Play with words: Rhyme & verse
- Children of all ages enjoy listening to bouncy rhythms and reciting catchy rhymes. In this lesson, students will use their senses to experience poetry. Students will listen to poems and rhymes, clap out syllables, and sing along with familiar tunes. They... (Learn more)
- Format: lesson plan (grade K–1 English Language Arts)
- Provided by: ESITEment