1st Edition

Writing to Learn Poetry and Literacy across the Primary Curriculum

By Fred Sedgwick Copyright 2000
    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    Writing to Learn looks at how poetry can be used as an enjoyable way to teach literacy across the curriculum. It includes remarkable poems and stories by children as well as clear descriptions of how to teach creatively within the framework of the National Literacy Strategy. The book goes through the primary curriculum, subject by subject:
    *Poetry and Science and Maths
    *Poetry and Personal, Social and Moral Education
    *Poetry and Art and Music
    *Poetry and Religious Education
    *Poetry for its Own Sake.
    The author includes:
    *advice on different ways children can compose their writing and how computers can be a valuable aid to children's writing
    *examples of published poetry and how it can be used to stimulate good writing
    *advice on bringing writers into schools and publishing school anthologies.
    This book will prove invaluable to teachers and parents keen to teach writing whilst seeing children as active and critical learners. It shows that if we expect great things from children in writing, we get them.

    Introduction Part I: Poetry and Science 1. Observing the Human Body 2. Fruit and Other Natural Things 3. Bicycles and Other Machines 4. Cats and Other Animals Footnote: some haikus and some riddles Prose Interlude: Children and their Names Part II: Poetry and Personal, Social and Moral Education 5. Me and the Rest of the World 6. Lists Part III: Putting Art in Prison to Set it Free 7. Pattern 8. Using Visual Images 9. Art and Multicultural Education 10. Poetry for Its Own Sake Prose Interlude: Stories and Beginning a Novel 11. 'So help me God': Poetry and Religious Education Appendices Bringing Living Writers into the Classroom Learning by Heart

    Biography

    Fred Sedgwick