Fun List Mondays

What are 3 Things You Like About Your Country (And 1 Thing You Would Change if You Could)?

Fun List Monday, July 2

What do you like about the country you live in? It could be as simple as apple pie and ice cream, or as meaningful as Freedom of Speech. Sometimes it’s helpful to take a step back and remember the good things.

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Write a list with me! Every Monday I will post a fun list. Fill out your list and enjoy it by yourself, share it on my Facebook page, in the comments or on Twitter (with the hashtag #FunListMondays). Not convinced? Read about how lists encourage better writing here.

Like this activity? See other Fun List Mondays here!

Story Share Topic!

Friday Story Share Topic: New Country

Ready for this week’s Story Share Topic?
Join in the fun! Write your story and share by Thursday night, July 5, for a chance to have your story shared on the site on Friday, July 13!

This Week’s Story Share Topic:

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Write a story about a character who just moved to a new country.

How is this country different from his/her old country? What struggles does the character have in the new country? How are these struggles overcome? The new country could be a real country you’ve studied or visited in the past, or it could be completely made up! Maybe the new country isn’t even on this planet! Let your imagination take off and send in your stories! (Please keep it between 100 and 1000 words.)

FAQ: If you don’t want to share your story, can you still write one? Absolutely!
Do you have to write a story on this particular topic? Nope! Writing stories is a great creative writing exercise, no matter what the topic. The topic is a prompt to get you started!

Writing with little ones? Read this post about how to include young children in writing activities.

Furry Thursday

Furry Thursday, No. 2

Can you guess the animal based on the clues?
Smash up science and English parts of speech together with this guessing game!

adjectives: furry, grizzly, hefty, strong, fast, dangerous, brown or black or white
verbs: Hunt, fish, paw, lumber, stand, crawl, attack, sniff, growl
nouns: Mama, Papa, Baby, honey, berries, fish, cave, claws, omnivore
biomes: Tundra (Cold), Deciduous Forest, Woodlands, Desert Edge, Temperate Forests

Think you know which animal?
Click here for the answer!

Simplified definitions:
Adjective: a describing word, placed before a noun (or pronoun)
Noun: 
a person, place, thing, or idea
Verb: 
an action word
Biome:
the type of environment where living things make their homes, a habitat (ex: desert, rainforest, tundra)
herbivore:
plant-eater
carnivore:
meat-eater
omnivore:
eats both plants and meat

Furry Thursday chipmunk

Freewrite Wednesday

Freewrite Wednesday: Imagine You are a Bird

Ready to free your writing? Let’s do a freewrite together!

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Imagine you are a bird. Write about your experience!
Questions to get you started:
What does it feel like to fly? Where would you live? What would it be like with your five senses: Sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch? What problems might you face?

Set your timer for 10 minutes and write, write, write!

About Freewrites: A freewrite is exactly what it sounds like: free! Use a freewrite to practice channeling thoughts from your mind to the paper. Never done a freewrite? Learn more in my Guide to Freewriting 

Story Share Topic!

Friday Story Share Topic 2

Ready for next week’s Story Share Topic? Join in the fun and send in your story by next Friday, June 29, for a chance to appear on the website on Friday, July 6.

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Write a story about a summer adventure.

Some questions to ask yourself: Where does it take place? Who are the characters? Try to make the Summer an important part of the story. Write between 100 and 1000 words and share away! I feel warm and summery just thinking about these awesome stories.

As submissions allow, I will share three stories on my website next Friday, one from each age category! The age categories are:
12 years-old and under
13-18 years
19 years +

I will do my best to reply to each of your stories.
Stories should be 100-1000 words and should be appropriate for all audiences.
Please include your name and age (or age range!) in your submission and send to:

FridayStoryShare@gmail.com

Okay, now go write a story!

Poetry Tuesday

Rhyming, Poem Study, Haiku

Hello! Welcome to Poetry Tuesday: the day we dip (or dive) into the lovely world of poetry!

Each Tuesday from June 19 to September 4th, I’ll share a fun poetry activity plus a poem study for all ages, as well as an advanced poetry lesson for ages 14 and up. Feel free to enjoy one, two, or all three of these fun resources! Scroll down to find the Poem Study and the Advanced Poetry Lesson.

Fun Poetry Activity: All About Rhyming
(for kids, adults, and everyone in between!)

“Did you ever have a time when you couldn’t make a rhyme… down by the bay?”

Jillions of poems rhyme, especially poems written for children. In future weeks we’ll get to read some of those poems, make observations about them, and even write our own. So what is a rhyme?

1. Identifying rhymes:
Read these words aloud:
Cat, sat, bat, that, flat, pat, splat, mat, hat, muskrat, fat

Notice anything about this group of words?
That’s right! They all rhyme.
These are all words that rhyme with the word cat.Did you notice how the end sound of each word sounds the same? Cat, Sat, Bat etc.

Let’s try another word: in.
in, bin, sin, grin, pin, win, chin, fin, thin, tin, spin, twin, sheepskin, tailspin

Do you hear how similar they sound? They all have different sounds at the beginning but the end of the words all sound the same.

2. Practicing Rhymes:

Your turn!
Can you find at least one rhyme for each of these words? See how many you can come up with!

1. up
2. sad
3. hug
4. bog
5. eat
6. light
7. stay
8. tail
9. bell
10. ash

3. Writing rhyming sentences:
Would you like to do some more??
Try writing a sentence using mostly words that rhyme.

For example:
Bill still feels ill from his fill of gills on the grill.

Need a word to get you started? Try one of these:
cat
pickle
trip
fly

Need help rhyming your words? Try using a rhyming dictionary! There’s one online at:
https://www.rhymer.com/

If you come up with an especially fun sentence, share it in the comments below!

Poem study:

Let’s read a poem and study it together!
Not sure how to study a poem? Here are some ideas. Choose one or all of these:

  1. Read aloud and enjoy the poem
  2. Neatly write out your favorite stanza for handwriting practice or…
  3. Print out the poem by copying it into your word processor
  4. Draw a picture about the poem
  5. Circle the words that rhyme!
  6. Read more about the author’s life
  7. Share with someone you love <3

Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star

Twinkle, twinkle, little star,
How I wonder what you are!
Up above the world so high,
Like a diamond in the sky.

When this blazing sun is gone,
When he nothing shines upon,
Then you show your little light,
Twinkle, twinkle, through the night.

Then the traveller in the dark
Thanks you for your tiny spark;
He could not see where to go,
If you did not twinkle so.

In the dark blue sky you keep,
And often through my curtains peep,
For you never shut your eye
Till the sun is in the sky.

As your bright and tiny spark
Lights the traveller in the dark,
Though I know not what you are,
Twinkle, twinkle, little star.

Jane Taylor

Twinkle Twinkle Little Star

Advanced Poetry Lesson

The next two Tuesdays we will learn and practice the ancient art of Haiku.

A few things to understand about Haiku:

  1. Haiku are originally a form of Japanese poetry.
  2. Haiku are short, only having 3 lines
  3. They have no rhyme
  4. They have a 5-7-5 syllable structure (see below!)
  5. Each poem captures a moment
  6. Haiku poems show the world like it is (concrete, rather than abstract)
  7. They usually contain something from nature and a word that shows what season it is
  8. They often leave you feeling thoughtful

Great! So… how do you write them?

It might help to talk about the structure of the poem. It’s hard to build a building without structure, isn’t it? So what is the structure of a Haiku?

A. Syllables
1st line: 5 syllables
2nd line: 7 syllables
3rd line: 5 syllables

For example…


Whitecaps on the bay:
A broken signboard banging
In the April wind.

— Richard Wright

Oftentimes Haiku poems follow the 5-7-5 syllable rule in Japanese but once they’re translated into English, the structure has to change a little. (Note: See the seasonal word here? April)

B. Two Images
Haiku are often made of two different thoughts or images. One thought or image is across two lines and the other is across one. For example:

new pond—
the first tadpole
wriggles over clean stones

-Christopher Herold

“New pond” is one thought, and “the first tadpole wriggles over clean stones” is the second thought. See how the second thought takes up two lines?

C.  A Cut
Another aspect of Haiku it that they usually contain a cut, or break, somewhere in the poem. For example:

summer grasses—
all that remains
of a warriors’ dreams

-Matsuo Basho (1644-1694)

See the cut after the first line?

Ready to write a Haiku?

I suggest finding a quiet place and thinking about your surroundings. If you can go outside, great! Try to describe, using a haiku, what you see, hear, smell, feel, or taste in two different images. It can be a little tricky, but the result is often surprisingly lovely.

Love your Haiku and want to share? Share it in the comments below!

Want to learn more or understand Haiku better?
Here’s a great video on YouTube that I thought expressed the topic well.
https://youtu.be/yUDuRwKwh8k