Bronx Handouts
Bronx Handouts
p. 1-22
RA: “Dreams Deferred”by Lanston
Hughes
TW: What are your dreams for the
future?
Do: Discuss the characters and add to your Write an “I am Not” poem-- use labels,
character nots; return to think write and boxes, and being judged as your theme. You
craft a poem about labels/boxes/being choose your form. Consider repeating, I am
judged not and ending with an I am stanza; or
alternating both
I’ll
READING ACTIVITIES WRITING ACTIVITIES CONNECTIONS & EXTENSIONS
“one day the whole world will hear what I Film/Music Connections:
have to say. Last week, my English calss
was the world.” (124)
connect to having something to say!
1 If I 1 If I 1 If I
2 2 2
3 3 3
4 would you ? 4 would you ? 4 would you ?
1 If I 1 If I 1 If I
2 2 2
3 3 3
4 would you still ? 4 would you still ? 4 would you still ?
1 If I 1 If I 1 If I
2 2 2
3 3 3
4 would you then? 4 would you then? 4 would you then?
1 If I 1 If I 1 If I
2 2 2
3 would you then? 3 would you then? 3 would you then?
4 Or would you 4 Or would you 4 Or would you
5. 5. 5.
6 I wonder. 6 I wonder. 6 I wonder.
in Bronx Masquerade
Character Comes from. . . is called . . . wants . . . believes . . . ends up . . .
in Bronx Masquerade
Character Comes from. . . is called . . . wants . . . believes . . . ends up . . .
Wesley
Boone
Tyrone
Bittings
Chankara
Troupe
Raul Ramirez
Diondra Jordan
Devon Hope
in Bronx Masquerade
Character Comes from. . . is called . . . wants . . . believes . . . ends up . . .
Lupe
Algarin
Gloria
Martinez
Janelle
Battle
Leslie
Lucas
Judianne
Alexander
in Bronx Masquerade
Character Comes from. . . is called . . . wants . . . believes . . . ends up . . .
Tanisha
Scott
Sterling
Hughes
Amy
Moscowitz
Shelia
Gamberoni
Steve
Ericson
Raynard
Patterson
Porscha
Johnson
Bronx Masquerade by Nikki Grimes 9/24
Somebody-Wanted-But-So
Your Name:
Mrs. Spillane
English I
March 2003
Purpose: To entertain
Audience: Teenagers
TEACHER EVALUATION
Is the main character well described? Yes No
The writing is well organized in paragraphs. Yes No
Does the main character talk about other characters in the novel? Yes No
Does the character have “issues”? Yes No
Is the difficulty the character has written about in the poem? Yes No
Does the writing reflect creativity? Yes No
Does the writing reflect understanding of the novel? YES NO
Does the main character talk about other characters in the novel? Yes No
Is the difficulty the character has written about in the poem? Yes No
What do you still need to work on in order to make this story good?
Directions: Read the following pages in your Elements of Literature book and complete the chart below. Note the
definitions of the terms. Then, find a poem that uses the term and note the example poem you found!
Figures of
simile
Speech: Seeing
Connections metaphor
p. 520-521
personification
Meter
Sounds of
Poetry: Rhythm Iamb
p. 554-555
foot
scanning
freeverse
Rhyme
Sounds of
Poetry: Rhyme Ryme Scheme
p. 559-560 approximate rhyme
internal rhyme
onomatopoeia
alliteration
Tone: It’s an
Attitude tone
p. 586-87
diction
in Poetry
GOALS:
• Students will be able to experience poetry as something enjoyable to both read and write.
• Students will be able to understand the elements of poetry such as imagery, theme, figures of speech, tone
and how each contributes to the meaning(s) of a poem
• Students will be able to make personal connections between literature, society, and their lives.
• Students will gain confidence as writers by creating something unique from their own life experiences.
ASSIGNMENTS:
1. Read, share and discuss a variety of poems from Elements of Literature including
“All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace” Richard Brautigan p. 543
“Women” by Alice Walker p. 556
“Forgive my Guilt” by Robert P. Tristram Coffin p. 562
“American Hero” by Essex Hemphill p. 573
“The Girl Who Loved the Sky” by Anita Endrezze p. 576
“Legal Alien” by Pat Mora p. 599
“The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost P. 602
“Ain’t I A Woman” by Soujourner Truth p. 611
Langston Hughes Poems (handouts in class)
Poetry Packet poems (handed out in class)
2. Read poems of your choosing, respond to them in your reading journal and log the poems you have read for
classwork grades.
3. Read pages in Elements of Literature as noted on Poetic Techniques Graphic Organizer. Complete the
Graphic Organizer for a classwork grade. (included in packet) Due:___________________
4. Write a formal personal response typed in MLA format to a poem of your choice.(Assingment sheet will be
handed out and posted to web). Due:___________________
5. Write an original poem that emulates (copies) the style of a poem of your choice. Include the poem you are
copying with your own. Due:___________________
6. Collect three to five poems that you feel should be included in our unit. Write a short reflection that says
why these poems should be included, why the whole class should read them and hand the reflection in with the
poems typed. Due:___________________
7. Write ten original poems using poetic techniques you have learned about. Select five of your best poems to
revise. Create an illustrated poetry portfolio that showcases your best five poems. (Assignment sheet will be
handed out and posted to web). Due:___________________
Reading and Writing Time will be given daily during Rotations and you will be given an opportunity
to share your poems with the class and at our POETRY SLAM! on ___________________
POETRY BY LANGSTON HUGHES Dinner Guest: Me
“Langston Hughes, a primary voice of the I know I am
Harlem Renaissance in the 1920’s, was known
The Negro Problem
as “The Poet Laureate of Harlem” in the period
of such writers as Zora Neale Hurston, Countee
Being wined and dined,
Cullen, and Claude McKay. These writers used Answering the usual questions
the social, political, and religious aspects of the That come to white mind
African American experience as stepping stones Which seeks demurely
for poetic expression. Widely divergent styles To Probe in polite way
and subject matters existed within the poetry of The why and wherewithal
the Harlem Renaissance. The jazz and blues Of darkness U.S.A.—
clubs in Harlem provided a forum for the Wondering how things got this way
emerging Black entertainers and writers who In current democratic night,
wrote and performed to raise the consciousness
Murmuring gently
of the Negro people and instill pride in their
African heritage.” Over fraises du bois,
-Barbara Garrison ”I’m so ashamed of being white.”
image
Name of Poem
image image
image
Author/History
What abouthte author? What is his or her history? What background does the author have that
influences the poem? What events are occurring, have occurred etc. that may influence the poem and
the poet?
Title
The title plays a role, even if there isn’t one. The author chooses a title carefully or chooses to omit a
title for a reason. Why?
Subject
What is the poem about. Usually can be summed up in a few sentences.
T hemes
What themes run throughout the poem; love, sacrifece, nature, etc. How is the theme conveyed in
the poem?
Point of View
View
Who is narrating? Who is the poem’s “speaker”? How is the point of view significant?
Imagery
What colors, smells, textures, sights, sounds, or tastes does the author use in the poem? How does
this create the feel of the poem?
Literary Devic
Literary es
Devices
How has the author used simile, metaphor, and personification? What sound devices, such as allitera-
tion, assonance, consonance or onomatopoeia, has the author used if any? How do these devices
help contribute to the meaning of the poem?
Rythm
What does the poem sound like? Does the beat or its rythm influence, mirror or relate to the meaning
or reading of the poem?
Ennui After Great Pain...
Jazz June. We
Die soon.
-Gwendolyn Brooks
I, Too.
-Langston Hughes
Shakespearean Sonnet Template
Remember that Love is your theme!
An English Sonnet by (your name):__________________________________
1 A
2 B
3 B
4 A
5 A
6 B
7 B
8 A
9 C
10 D
11 C
12 D
13 C
14 D
Remember in an English sonnet, thematically, in the first two quatrains the poet poses a question and
tentative answers; a turn (emotional or ideological) or shift in focus occurs in the third quatrain, and
the final answer is given in the concluding couplet (which should be written as a complete thought).
Try and also limit yourself to the form of 10 syllables per line (if you can make that true iambic
pentameter all the better!). Good luck!
Sonnet Template
Remember that Love is your theme!
An Italian Sonnet by (your name):__________________________________
1 A
2 B
3 B
4 A
5 A
6 B
7 B
8 A
9 C
10 D
11 C
12 D
13 C
14 D
Remember in an Italian sonnet, thematically, the octave (or first 8 lines) presents a problem, expresses
an idea, or poses a question, and the sestet (last 6 lines) resolves, answers or drives home your point.
(which should be written as a complete thought). Try and also limit yourself to the form of 10 syl-
lables per line (if you can make that true iambic pentameter all the better!). Good luck!
Name:
Date: Period:
Directions: Read and chunk the poems below. Show that you have
read actively. Identify literary devices (simile, metaphor etc.) and
summarize the meaning/action of the stanza. You might even
STEPStone the poem in the margin or on an attached sheet of paper
to show you’ve read actively.
Title and
author of the
Poem
Evaluate the First, what is the “message” you get from the piece?
“message” you Is it good, bad, positive, judgmental? Evaluate the message—give your
think the poem opinion of it and say why you have that opinion.
sends.
Line
What’s your
favorite line and
why?
Link this poem
with something
from your own
experience:
What can you
connect it to?
What does it
remind you of?
Make note of
question(s) you
would ask the
author or the
speaker in the
poem.
Express
yourself. Imitate
part of the poem
or write a few
lines in prose
about the same
topic you see in
the poem.
Sonnet Evaluation Form
for a Sonnet by ______________________
Describe what the sonnet is saying to you?
Sonnet Conventions
What is the problem/situation/question? (If you can not answer this question then circle no above)
What does the writer feel/think at first and how does it change?
(If you can not answer this question then circle no)