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Search Results for: fiction prompt

Take Your Poet to School Week: Mother Goose

By Will Willingham 2 Comments

Mother Goose Take Your Poet to School Week Cover

Even the mythical poets are getting in on the fun of Take Your Poet to School Week. Today, Mother Goose hops on a stick and makes her debut.

Filed Under: Blog, Children's Poetry, Mother Goose, poetry teaching resources, Take Your Poet to School Week

Teach It: How to Avoid the Tragedy of Becoming “Only One Thing”

By Callie Feyen 4 Comments

Let’s play The Excuse Me Game to avoid the tragedy of becoming “only one thing” and losing ourselves and our possibilities due to a failure of imagination.

Filed Under: Blog, Book Love, Children's Activities, Children's Authors, Games, Literacy for Life

Commit Poetry: “Ozymandias” by Percy Bysshe Shelley

By Sandra Heska King 29 Comments

Ozymandias

Sandra Heska King continues her poetry memorization journey by committing Percy Bysshe Shelley’s “Ozymandias.”

Filed Under: Blog, Commit Poetry, Percy Bysshe, poetry

By Hand: Decorating

By Megan Willome 14 Comments

Beautiful White Bow Christmas Tree

By Hand is a monthly prompt that focuses on freeing our words by using our hands. This month, we’re exploring decorating with Megan Willome as our guide.

Filed Under: Blog, By Hand, writing prompt, writing prompts

Through the Looking Glass: Creative Writing Workshop

By Megan Willome 8 Comments

Wonderland Jakob Lawitzki

Children’s stories lead us into our most imaginative selves. Come kindle your curiosity, encourage your whimsy, spark your creativity, and find new ways to think and be, in this inspiring writing workshop that uses children’s stories, as well as grownup’s stories, to take you through the looking glass.

Filed Under: Blog, Workshops

Storm in a Teacup: Slowing to the Speed of Tea

By Will Willingham 20 Comments

Slowing to the Speed of Tea floating tea kettle

In this week’s book club discussion of Helen Czerski’s Storm in a Teacup, we consider the importance of time, speed, and certain substances we’d rather not mention.

Filed Under: Blog, book club, poetry prompt, Science Poems, writing prompt

Top 10 Books that Inspired Me (and You)

By Megan Willome 28 Comments

If you could only choose ten books that inspired you, what would they be? Megan Willome shares her personal Top 10.

Filed Under: Blog, Book Love, Books

Of Color, Beauty, the Alphabet, and Fun: “A is for Azure”

By Glynn Young 10 Comments

Chameleon A is for Azure color

“A is for Azure,” written by L.L. Barkat and illustrated by Donna Falcone, is a book about color, the alphabet, and literacy. It’s also full of childlike wonder.

Filed Under: A Is for Azure, Art, article, book reviews, Books, children, Children's Activities, color poems, Literacy, Literacy for Life, Literacy Starts With Love

Writing Workshop: Words You Can Taste!

By T.S. Poetry

Words You Can Taste Banana Bread

In this delicious food-writing workshop, you’ll have a chance to look at popular favorites (potatoes, bread, cakes, anyone?) and a rainbow of foods you may or may not have ever developed a love for (eggplant, olives, sugar-coated rose petals?). Come write words you can taste!

Filed Under: Blog, Workshops

National Poetry Month Dare: Commit ‘The Stolen Child’ by W. B. Yeats

By Will Willingham 14 Comments

yeats fairy land stolen child

Join us in our National Poetry Month Dare as we memorize “The Stolen Child” by W. B. Yeats, complete with printable Faery Badges.

Filed Under: Blog, Commit Poetry, National Poetry Month, poetry, Poetry Dare, W. B. Yeats

Play It Forward: Writing Workshop

By T.S. Poetry 5 Comments

pinwheel colorful play writing workshop

Have you ever wished that whimsy and fun—that play itself—could be the beginning of serious work? Enrich your writing through play—in this special workshop with authors Laura Boggess and Laura Lynn Brown.

Filed Under: Blog, Workshops

On Finding Stories—And Maybe Myself

By Callie Feyen 12 Comments

Finding stories - leather journal collection

Callie Feyen invites readers to consider not just what is in a picture, but what’s not in the picture, when finding the story to tell.

Filed Under: Blog, English Teaching Resources, Finding Inspiration, Writing Life

Poetry for Life Scholarship Winner: Teja Dupree, of Johns Hopkins University

By T.S. Poetry 4 Comments

Teja Dupree Johns Hopkins The Writing Seminars Poetry for Life Scholarship Winner

Meet Teja Dupree, college sophomore from Woodbridge, Virginia, who is the 2017 winner of our Poetry for Life Scholarship.

Filed Under: Blog, Poetry for Life

Poetic Voices: Sandee Gertz Umbach and Lori Lamothe

By Glynn Young 3 Comments

Poet Voice Umbach and Lamothe

Collections by Sandee Gertz Umbach and Lori Lamothe demonstrate how poets shape their words and images to communicate what inspires them.

Filed Under: article, Books, Poems, Poetic Voices, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets, Science Poems

Poetry at Work Day (Take 2)

By Will Willingham 2 Comments

Poetry at Work Day Take 2

The Poetry at Work Day celebration went on for days, from France to Finland. Here’s another round of delightful finds on Twitter and Instagram from hardworking poetic revelers.

Filed Under: Poetry at Work Day

Twitter Party: The Odyssey and The Wooded Isle, Part 2

By Glynn Young 1 Comment

The Wooded Isle and The Odyssey

Part 2 of Tweetspeak’s recent poetry party on Twitter was guided by prompts from “The Odyssey” by Homer, and 10 would-be Homers produced some epic poems.

Filed Under: article, Classic Poetry, Odyssey, Poems, poetry, Twitter poetry

Twitter Party: The Odyssey and The Wooded Isle, Part 1

By Glynn Young 11 Comments

Fod in woods The Odyssey

“The Odyssey” by Homer provided the prompts for Tweetspeak’s recent poetry party on Twitter, and 10 would-be Homers wrote their own epic poems.

Filed Under: article, Epic Poetry, Odyssey, Poems, poetry prompt

Tea Time: Writing Our Leaves & Our Lives Workshop

By T.S. Poetry 13 Comments

tea-time-workshop-writing-our-leaves-and-our-lives

Explore the tasty partnership of tea, story, poetry and writing—in this special writing workshop with author Megan Willome.

Filed Under: Blog, Tea, Workshops

Poets and Poems: Mohja Kahf and “Hagar Poems”

By Glynn Young 4 Comments

Desert Hagar Poems

In “Hagar Poems, ” poet Mohja Kahf tells and retells the biblical story of Hagar, Abraham, and Sarah, weaving threads between ancient and contemporary times.

Filed Under: Blog, Books, Family Poems, Poems, poetry, poetry reviews, Poets

It’s Random Acts of Poetry Day!

By Will Willingham 6 Comments

Random Acts of Poetry teddy bear on cardboard box

It’s Random Acts of Poetry Day, a day devoted to painting poetry in the public square. Share some poetry with your world (and make it better).

Filed Under: Blog, poetry, random acts of poetry

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