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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: forgiveness. Joe Sottile, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Light Verse or Lightning Verse? (Joe Sottile, 2005)

Cover of Once Upon a Time magazine, Sprint 2005 issue



If you were to ask this elementary teacher of thirty-three years what type of poetry has the biggest impact on students, the thumbs up winner is light verse. Light verse is defined as "poetry that is playful or humorous and usually rhymed." If we extend the umbrellas of "light verse" to include such poetry as what we find in the late Shel Silverstein's Where the Sidewalk Ends or Falling Up, which is full of quirks, surprise rhymes, and free verse, then light verse is music to soul of most elementary students.

Children love the poetry books of Shel Silverstein, Jack Prelutsky, Judith Viorst, Bruce Lansky, Jeff Moss, and Kalli Dakoa. At first glance their poems look easy to write. Just pick a topic — any topic — from apples to zebras, and write a poem. You don't have to worry...

To read the rest, click here...

http://www.consideration.org/sottile/for-teachers/light-or-lightning.html

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2. The Best Bunch of Writing Quotes



"Writing comes more quickly if youhave something to say." ~Sholem Asch

"Men may move mountains, but ideasmove men." ~Lois McMaster Bujold

"Ink on paper is as beautiful to meflowers on mountains; God composes, whyshouldn’t we?" ~Audra Foveo-Alba

"There is more pleasure in buildingcastles in the air then on the ground."~Edward Gibbon

"There is nothing in a caterpillarthat tells you it’s going to be a butterfly." ~Buckminister Fuller
                           
“You need chaos in your soul to givebirth to a dancing star.”~Nietzsche

“Author sho never give you somethingto disagree with never give you anything to thinkabout.”~Michael LaRocca

“If my doctor told me that I had sixmonths to live, I wouldn’t brood, I’d type faster.”~Isaac Asimov
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