deltamiss: (Bloomin' Parsley)
[personal profile] deltamiss
What a week!

For the Poetry in a Pot project the students have to write a haiku. It is a difficult form of poetry, at best, but for some reason the kids enjoy them. I use the traditional model of three lines, five-seven-five syllables, about nature and with a contrast. By the time I've read two or three dozen, they all begin to sound alike. Next year, the poem comes first...then the pot. It is exhausting trying to guide seventy/eighty kids in writing poetry of any kind, but perhaps if they complete the difficult part first, they'll be more likely to create some fair images.

I have discovered that haiku is an exercise in:

1. Futility if a teacher fully expects to get a top-quality poem. :/

2. Discipline for the student when I am the teacher and he has to edit time and time again.

3. Patience for the teacher when she is working diligently to guide the student to a decent first line.

3. Revelation for the teacher when she discovers a kid who just won't give up no matter how many edits are required.

Only a few of the students have finished their poems, but all have finished the pots. I think they turned out better than last year's group. I really like the use of different textures and colors together. Even the all-leaf pots turned out great. :D



We began a little later this year so the students had more greenery and flowers to choose from. They brought in many, many more blooms than last year's students.










(no subject)

Date: 2009-05-02 03:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] heartmart.livejournal.com
Oh, well if white glue works, then I would try Mod Podge. It has the same stickiness, and dries clear - but would seal out moisture and air so the color would last longer - but it would cost a bit more.

They are so pretty, it would be nice to make them last a bit longer.

Any way - I am going to try your pots with the A-Team for Mother's Day gifts! But we will put a flower in them.

OH! I have a friend who used to write haiku on strips of brown paper or parchment - she did it in calligraphy. Then she hung them in the trees with thread. Depending on the season, they would last a few weeks to a few months.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-05-02 11:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] deltamiss.livejournal.com
I've thought about buying a couple of jars of Mod Podge just for this project. It's the only one of the year we do that requires white glue. Maureen used to use Mod Podge.

What a neat idea with the haiku!

(no subject)

Date: 2009-05-02 07:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] heartmart.livejournal.com
One spring she filled my leafless little crabapple tree with haiku about spring and related topics all on pastel parchment. It was beautiful!

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