KS2 KS3 Wellbeing In Poetry - Poetry Society

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Poetryclass Fresh ideas for learning from The Poetry SocietyNature andwellbeing in poetryKS2KS4by Clare MulleyIntroductionThis resource provides the basis for an understandingof nature and wellbeing in poetry. It is designed asan accompaniment to a poetry challenge by the T.S.Eliot Prize-winning poet Jen Hadfield for Young PoetsNetwork – youngpoetsnetwork.org.uk – developed incollaboration with the charity People Need Nature –peopleneednature.org.uk. Young Poets Network alsooffers information and resources which will be usefulfor teachers and poets alike.KS3Topics at a glance Nature poetry Sensory description Emotive language HaikuRediscovering the natural worldWriting about the outdoors should automaticallymean having some contact with it, and reaping all theassociated psychological benefits. While the age of thetablet has definite advantages in terms of learning, italso means that many young people may now be alltoo used to having their entertainment provided at thetouch of a button, without the need for independentthought.I have taught groups who quite literally panic withoutinstructions; when told to free-write, children are stillputting up their hands every few seconds, asking“What should I say?”, forgetting how to have funimagining from scratch.The aim of this resource is to help redress this balancea little – unlike the Internet, Nature won’t just cometo you; you have to be prepared to go in search of it.Ever noticed how may good children’s books beginwith the main characters going for a walk? The tasksbelow put students into situations where they have togo outside, rely on their own senses and take theinitiative. 2016 The Poetry Society & the author/sDistribution authorised for educational use onlyeducationadmin@poetrysociety.org.uk poetrysociety.org.uk1

Exercise 1: Joy and freedomWhen you are very young, the countryside seems likean adventure park, and it can be hugely exhilaratingto run around in those open spaces. This workshophelps students get back into that unashamedlychildlike mind-set, which associates nature withfreedom.Exercise 2: Walk on the wild sideThe best thing about a walk is that you can make it realor imaginary. Either arrange a short, clearly set out walkin an outdoor spot near you with plenty of wildlife or,if that isn’t possible, imagine a walk which you canrecreate in a classroom setting, and do a step-by-stepnarration with ‘props’.As a whole class, read two or more outdoorsy poemswhich express a childish sense of joy. Good examplesinclude:This activity works for all ages, because it is possibleto tailor the walk (and what you might see on it) todifferent levels of maturity. An extra challenge is anight walk, which takes away the obvious sights andsharpens the other senses. Give students the task ofcollecting props as a run-up to the workshop – anotheropportunity to get them outside. These could includecuttings to sniff, objects like stones and feathers to hold,or photos. You can also use video clips and recordings;look up recordings of birdsong, or use a naturalambience CD. As things ‘progress’, students must writedown what they see, hear, touch, feel, smell and taste.Tell them to write without editing or over-thinking. ‘A Boy’s Song’ by James Hogg (bit.ly/1PDy4rN) ‘Fern Hill’ by Dylan Thomas (bit.ly/1SubGFL) ‘[in Just-]’ by E.E. Cummings (bit.ly/1yMVh4Z)The last poem offers a brilliant contrast to the othersif you want to do a side-by-side poetry analysis,because it doesn’t use obvious images, but insteadcoins the gorgeous phrases “mud-luscious” and“puddle-wonderful”.Keep asking questions: What noises can you hear? What might have caused them? What can you smell? How does the ground feel under your feet?Ask for comments on the tone of the poems and starta discussion – how old is the narrator? How do theythink the narrator is feeling? What is it about theworld outside that makes them feel that way? Nowdivide the class into small groups with a poem each,and get them to identify poetic features which help tocreate this sense of joy. Depending on ability, youcould give them worksheets split into columns withheadings like ‘alliteration’, ‘assonance’, ‘personification’and ‘onomatopoeia’. 2016 The Poetry Society & the author/sDistribution authorised for educational use onlyeducationadmin@poetrysociety.org.uk poetrysociety.org.ukWhen on the spot, children often lose theirnerve and blurt out general terms like ‘lovely’,‘beautiful’ and ‘scary’ - creative cul-de-sacswhich stop something more interesting fromdeveloping. Block obvious dead-ends by making abanned ‘boring word list’. It’s also a great idea to banbasic colour words; try to help them come up withmore striking adjectives which reflect what it remindsthem of, e.g. ‘orange’ or ‘yellow’ could be replaced by‘sunset’ or ‘flaming’, and ‘pink’ is like ‘an embarrassedcheek’ or ‘candyfloss’.Poet’stip2

Exercise 4: The sublime and the scaryThe Romantic poets, such as Wordsworth, Coleridgeand Blake, were as inspired by the terror and grandeurof nature as its gentler beauties. They understood thatexploring this element (which they called ‘thesublime’) aroused very strong emotions for both writerand reader. Children should be encouraged to think ofthis side of nature, and explore what they findunsettling about it – ‘uncomfortable’ subjects oftencreate fantastic poems.As a class, read Seamus Heaney’s ‘Death of aNaturalist’ (bit.ly/1XZWvWz) and Ted Hughes’ ‘Pike’(bit.ly/1RNUSwJ). Talk about the dark, complex sideof nature they represent. Are the poets saying ‘bad’things about the animals? Are we meant to dislikethem? In the case of Heaney’s poem, talk about howgetting older affects your view of animals.Exercise 3: Focus on HaikuThe beauty of the seasons remains a focal point inJapanese culture. Haiku are famous for theirsimplicity, which is designed to reflect the purity ofnature. They may look easy, but haiku are a challengeprecisely because of their compactness. Writing one isa very valuable exercise in cutting out all but theessential vocabulary in order to make an image morestriking.Ask the group to write a list of bullet-points,describing a time when they saw thefrightening side of nature. Encourage them tolist things that were spectacular or awe-inspiring –the raw power of a thunderstorm, for example – aswell as things that made them afraid. You can then askthem to lift their favourite lines from it as material fora poem, perhaps using contrasting lines to emphasisethe ‘sublime’ and the ‘scary’.Poet’stipMost people know that haiku have three lines with asyllabic pattern of five, seven, five, but they must alsohave a seasonal reference (kigo) like cherry blossoms orautumn leaves as the subject. An interesting ideawould be to create urban haiku, to make studentsexamine nature in everyday life. Maybe a red foxslipping through a dark garden? Moss on a subwaywall? A tiny flower which has forced its way through apavement crack?If your class has been studying war, also look at themore sobering examples of nature imagery used bypoets like Isaac Rosenberg and Wilfred Owen. Myown poem, ‘Colonel Okey’s Ambush at Sulby Hedge’(see page 5) involves using wildlife metaphors toportray the tension and discomfort of a battlefield(bit.ly/1V3PEgD):These haiku rules are enough for younger groups, butif you want to stretch older groups, mention the othertraditional feature – a juxtaposition between twoimages or ideas in the poem (kiru). Show themBasho’s frog poem as an example; this uses a clevercontrast between noise and silence to paint the scene(bit.ly/1TgFzMe). The Haiku Foundation also has lotsof modern examples on their webpage:(bit.ly/1PDwYfH). 2016 The Poetry Society & the author/sDistribution authorised for educational use onlyeducationadmin@poetrysociety.org.uk poetrysociety.org.uk3

Lightning in aLandscape,etching, 1765,by JohannDaniel HeimlichCreating a scrapbookAfter these excercises, your groups will have plenty ofmaterial for writing at least one nature poem each.They could choose to write a longer list poem basedon their ‘walk’, a series of haikus focussing on onecreature or object, or a contrast poem about the ‘light’and ‘dark’ aspects of nature.About the authorClare Mulley is a London Laureate, and a poetrycolumnist for The Skinny. Currently, she is Poet inResidence at The Battlefields Trust, a charity whichworks to preserve battlefields for posterity, and theHampshire School, Chelsea. Her next project is anArctic residency in Svalbard, where she hopes toproduce a work on global warming. Clare leadsfreelance poetry workshops for schools across the UK.If you want a fantastic way to display them, createnature poetry scrapbooks, either in groups or as aclass. These could detail the route of your walk, usingpoems about different animals and objects as markers,with photographs, drawings and scraps of handwrittennotes to provide extra interest.Challenge groups of pupils to write in the‘voice’ of an animal, plant or stone ratherthan just describing it in their own eyes.What would it see? How would it view other naturalthings? How would it view us?Poet’stip 2016 The Poetry Society & the author/sDistribution authorised for educational use onlyeducationadmin@poetrysociety.org.uk poetrysociety.org.uk4

Colonel Okey’s Ambushat Sulby HedgeBy Clare MulleyThey had skirted the hedge, looking all the time for the softest pathfree from betraying twigs. Somewhere a horsewhickered at silence, the smell of itpressed downand there suddenlythe others, standing twenty breaths’ distance.The moment rounds, grows pendulous,a water beadhung on the grass that fringes them, as yet untrampled –yards away, one lad yawns,another tosses ribaldries, unsure of how to fill an instantboth eternal and long lost (not knowing they’re already deadas fate and earth can will it – as all flesh is dead at birth)but hewho must set the cogs in motion, pausesa kestrel that mounts air’s summit without diving,wary of the still field he must breakto draw bloodand make home.He cocks his musket, one eye closes;all creation hackles, that last instant, at the catchof metal brushing back upon itself, gathered to spring.There will be no undoingthe spark that follows.Commissioned by the Naseby Battlefield Project andreproduced by kind permission of The Battlefields Trust. 2016 The Poetry Society & the author/sDistribution authorised for educational use onlyeducationadmin@poetrysociety.org.uk poetrysociety.org.uk5

Poetryclass Fresh ideas for learning from The Poetry Society 1 Nature and wellbeing in poetry by Clare Mulley Introduction This resource provides the basis for an understanding of nature and wellbeing in poetry. It is designed as an accompaniment to a poetry challenge by the T

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