I have come to describe this exuberant, joyful reaction to literature as being a result of literary immersion: complete preoccupation and delight in a novel.
Read MoreEnjoy some little glimpses into the classroom.
Read MoreAnd so I sing the poplars; and when I come to die
I will not look for jasper walls, but cast about my eye
For a row of wind-blown poplars against an English sky.
Through poetry, the Ingalls are able to keep their spirits alive through the nearly-lethal winter. Where there was dark, silence, and a dull throbbing headache, poetry sheds light, brings joy, and banishes pain.
Read MoreJust as nothing green can grow in a trodden garden, nothing beautiful can bloom in a mind that is numbed day after day by cheap stimulation.
Read MoreEvery year, I make literary Valentines to pass out to my classes which accompany the books we are reading at the time.
Read MoreEach day in the classroom is filled with beauty, and it is often difficult to decide what to write about. So, here is a little bit of everything from this week.
Read MoreIt is through discussion that we help children to access the most valuable part of poetry—the connection to real life.
Read MoreBy drawing connections between themes and characters to others within the same story, in different stories, and to our own experiences, we are practicing a skill that serves to bring those vivid images of lofty ideals and values to the forefront of our minds, giving us something to aspire towards in our everyday lives.
Read MorePoetry contains the heights of human joy, the depths of our sorrows, and every shade in between, distilled into language so sincere, so lovingly chosen, that nothing compares to the power of being able to summon it to your lips at will.
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