We had a lot to get to today so I won’t start lollygagging now. Oh, wait. Speaking of lollygagging:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cDaFcQJC4z8[/youtube]
OK. Now where was I? Oh, yes. No lollygagging and all that. Off we go…
Learning Intentions
Here are the goals I had for each learner by the end of today’s session:
I [the learner] can…
- Self-assess my haiku writing
- Give thoughtful feedback to an author in a conference setting
- Rehearse and present my haiku with power and passion
- Sell my preferred poetry strategy from the Chapter 8 reading to a classmate
- Thoughtfully consider the Lit Circle books on offer and choose one to read
In hindsight, I think we touched on all of these.
Daily Write – Haiku Self-Assessment Process
I asked you to self-assess your haiku products and writing process with the following 4 sentence starters. The audience was the “teacher” that you would conference with shortly:
- You should notice…
- I’m most proud of…because…
- My greatest challenge on this task was…because…
- My best haiku is…because…
Writing Conference
After modeling a writing conference focused on these three questions:
- What’s working (in your work)?
- What’s not?
- What next?
I gave you a chance to have a go in the role of “teacher” and student in a conference setting.
Energizer #1 – Telephone Charades by Christina
Poetry Playoffs
I set the stage with a poetry presentation clip from the Mike Myers joint, So I Married An Axe Murderer:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlkoQ4bUE5k[/youtube]
Then, in an effort to model the need for skill work with students if you want them to improve as speakers, we worked with Punch (=power) and Paint (=passion), two concepts we’ve played with before in our Me in a Bag Speeches (remember those?) in Term 1. John S. O’Connor’s book, Wordplaygrounds: Reading, Writing, and Performing Poetry in the English Classroom, is where I found the ideas we used. I can’t recommend this poetry book highly enough, as I borrowed our Haiku process from there, too!
Armed with your powers to punch and paint, you rehearsed for the PPs, we chose the draw, and decided how would would assess the presenters (on delivery, content, and form, as it turned out) [Thanks to Nicole for the photos in this post – LH]:

As the image above attests to, in the end, Eric A. – the freshly crowned Haiku Guru – took the honours with his piece. Here it is in all its award winning glory:
Entering
Naked I enter
From my mother’s womb I slip
…brr Let me back in.
Luckily no one captured the final performance on their camera so I won’t be posting an accompanying video!
Energizer #2 – What’s My Fave Food by Mirela
Reading Discussion on Student Diversity’s Chapter 8: Poetry – Three Invitations
To process this chapter, I asked you to identify your preference for one of the three strategies outlined in the text and then sell it to a classmate. We debriefed by talking about the reasons we thought the strategies might work with the learners in your classrooms.
Literature Circles Books Out
Using one full-blow book talk for The Crazy Man by Pamela Porter and a set of book trailers from YouTube, I introduced the set of books we’re going to work with over the final 3 weeks of class.
The book trailers are in a previous post and here’s the blurb I wrote up for The Crazy Man:

Homework for Wednesday’s Session – Novel Reading & Six-Hat Thinking
You have two tasks to take care of for Wednesday’s session and both are outlined in this image:

The hat you need to use for your Six-Hat Thinking on Chapter 6 – The Whole Class Novel was assigned by numbering off in class. Here are how the numbers fit with the hats:

Here’s the Six-Hat Handout that was, ahem, handed out in class. This style of thinking was pioneered by Edward deBono:

The video clip below gives you a nice primer on the purpose and power of the Six Thinking Hats approach:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PqmCUAGcsnI[/youtube]
If you missed class and don’t have a number, just choose one, put on its associated Thinking Hat, and have a go with your reading and note taking.
Oh, and there’s no excuses for not doing this reading. For some reason, Chapter 6 of the Student Diversity text is online here.
That’s all for today. See you on Thursday.
– Lawrence