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The Swirling
Mix:
How One Teacher Helps His Students See Poetry through Collage
by
Dave Luhman, Dobbs Ferry High School, Dobbs Ferry, NY
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to article about this lesson plan.
Go
to examples of student collages.
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Filmed and edited by Craig Meyerson
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Objectives
& Skills:
Students will
develop a personal and meaningful interpretation of a poem.
Students will recognize the importance of visualizing poetic imagery
when seeking to find meaning in a poem.
Students will recognize that certain feelings or ideas may be
associated with particular images or words.
Materials:
Blackboard/chalk or overhead.
Desks arranged in two parallel columns facing each other with
an ample space between them at center. One desk should be in the
center of room between the rows.
Copies of
the poem "Poet's Obligation" (from a
translation of Pablo Neruda's The Sea and the Bells)
Selected collages
from Dan Eldon's journals. (Eldon, Kathy, ed., The Journey Is
the Destination, the Journals of Dan Eldon, San Francisco: Chronicle
Books, 1997. ISBN 0-8118-1586-2)
Sheet or blanket
containing: Many different kinds of magazines (Nat. Geographic,
Time, Elle, etc.), newspapers, pens, pencils, markers: all colors,
and anything else you can think of: wrapping ribbon, containers
of stuff like sand or glitter, other poems, burnt matches, paper
clips, a light bulb (yes, a student actually used it in his collage!).
Tools: Some
or all of the following adhesives: Elmers glue, rubber cement,
glue sticks, scotch tape, black electrical tape, etc. Scissors,
Hi-liters, 8" x 11" (or bigger) sheets of stiff paper (i.e. construction
paper). Student notebooks, learning logs and writing utensils.
Procedures:
A.
On the board: - Write the credo of Eldon's journal.
B.
Directions to students on Eldon book:
1.
Ask students: Why do people keep diaries or journals? During
discussion, confirm and/or develop reasons for writing journals.
2.
Introduce Eldon's work as an example of a very creative journal.
- Invite students to come stand around center desk to show
them the book. - Describe Eldon's life and interpret the credo
together with the students' help. - Describe how a collage
works: use a two-image example. - Show samples from Eldon's
book and ask questions about the moods and emotions the pictures
seem to create. Ask the students what details in the pictures
create these moods. Point out uses of different media. What
do the pictures say about Eldon himself and the place and
people he visits?
C.
Directions to students on Poetry Collages:
1
. Present the idea that a collage is actually very similar
to a poem: both use very vivid images to show emotions and
create meaning. Poetry is a little harder to understand because
you have to make the words into images in your mind. To show
you what I mean, we are each going to create a collage based
on a poem assigned for English class.
2.
Introduce "Poet's Obligation". -
Hand out vocabulary sheet with definitions already on it.
- Activate any prior historical knowledge and make predictions
using the title. - Read over the poem with the students.
3.
Making the collage: Ask students to hi-lite at least 8 images
from throughout the poem. What images stand out the most?
Are there any particular images they like or can "see" clearly?
Are any images repeated in the poem? Ask students to find
images and begin to arrange them on the stiff sheets of paper
(Students SHOULD NOT glue anything down yet). Teacher should
float around to individual students to monitor what they are
doing. Teacher should discuss with each student what the student
thinks the poem means while he arranges the images. Emphasize
the PROCESS of trying to generate meaning. - As students develop
meaning for the poem, encourage elaboration and allow them
to start gluing things down.
Click
here to see examples of student collages
Evaluation:
A.
When they are done with their collages, ask them to write a paragraph
that explains how their collage represents the meaning they found
in the poem. Prepare the students to share their interpretation
with other students in the class.
B.
Ask students to write a journal entry for homework. The journal
entry will go into their ring-binder learning logs in the Understanding
Literature section. Question to answer: How does visualizing the
images in a poem help you understand a poem?
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