カテゴリー 全て - feedback - assessment - devices - criteria

によって michelyn routhier 6年前.

259

Protest Poetry

Students engage in a series of lessons focused on poetry analysis and creation. They begin by reading and analyzing classic poems and then move on to modern forms, including song lyrics.

Protest Poetry

Feedback given: students may need support or feedback, assessment primarily used to plan forward.

Feedback given: teacher will provide feedback for analyzing and written explanation.

Performance Task: Peer and Teacher (oral and written) Feedback given before, during and after writing.

Feedback: Oral Feedback given when co-constructing success criteria and anchor charts.

Feedback: Teacher and Peers give feedback of short poems based on success criteria.

Protest Poetry

Lesson 7: Students will Write their own Protest Poetry using the success criteria generated in Lesson 6.

Assessment As and Of Learning: Students will self and peer assess using criteria. Teacher will assess culminating task (poem).

Lesson 6: Students will analyze student samples of Protest/Critical Stance Poetry to Co-create success criteria for their own writing.

Lesson 4: Reading a Video. Students will look at a lyric video and use our anchor chart to analyze for poetic devices.

Focus on Student Voice: Students will choose their own song lyrics to analyze.

Lesson 2: Read and Analyze classic poetry using anchor chart and own ideas.

Assessment for and as Learning: Students will write a poem that mirrors the form and poetic devices within The Red Wheelbarrow. Students will co-create success criteria for these short poems.

Lesson 5: Students will analyze song lyrics of their own choice using anchor chart.

Assessment of and as Learning: Students will write a paragraph explaining the poetic devices within the song lyric of their choice, and comment on the author's effectiveness and point of view. Co-construction of success criteria: What makes a good answer?

Lesson 3: Interact with World Changers. Students will discuss world changers, sort and classify, then add to a list, all leading to the idea that they are world changers. What is your passion?

Focus on Point of View: Who would you add to this list?

Lesson 1: What Makes a Poem a Poem? Is a song a poem? Analyzing popular music as poetry, co-construction of anchor chart of poetic devices.

Assessment For Learning: Exit Ticket What poetic devices did the poet use effectively? Explain your thinking.