Archive for the ‘Poetry for children’ Category
Hey kids! What do you see?
The National Institute of Health has named May Healthy Vision Month!
A lot of times we take our eyes for granted. This is a lovely poem by K.C. Bean that encourages kids to use and appreciate their eyes.
Take a look!
Your Eyes
Hey kids!
Have you noticed your eyes?
Squeeze them tight
Then open them wide!
What’s all around you?
What can you see?
The biggest sky,
The tiniest flea?
Your awesome eyes,
They see all around.
Look to the sides
Look up, look down.
Use them to read
Or watch TV.
In bright light or dark
What can you see?
The colors, the lights,
The patterns, the shapes
Wherever you look
Is a big see-scape!
Love them, enjoy them,
Take care of them too.
Your eyes are a wonderful
Part of you.
Visit K.C. Bean on Facebook!
Start the Week With Words: FCAT Blues!
Posted by: wpbkids on: April 11, 2011
- In: authors | books | early literacy | elementary | language skills | Literacy | poems | Poetry | Poetry for children | read alouds | reading | school | Uncategorized | west palm beach | west palm beach public library
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Got the FCAT Blues?
Here is a school poem to lift your spirits during this FCAT week!
The Very Best Feeling
~by Betsy Franko
There’s excited,
delighted,
scared,
and mad.
There’s happy,
embarrased,
surprised,
and sad.
But the very best feeling
that we’ve ever had,
the one that we have every day,
is the feeling we get
when the final bell rings,
and there’s nothing to do but just PLAY!
From the book:
Start the Week With Words!
Posted by: wpbkids on: April 4, 2011
- In: authors | books | early literacy | elementary | emergent literacy | Literacy | poems | Poetry | Poetry for children | preschool | read alouds | toddler | Uncategorized | west palm beach public library
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Here is a Spring-y poem for young and old!
The alliteration and repetition build important early literacy skills such as phonetic awareness and vocabulary. Read this to your babies, or help your older children recite this playful poem!
*
Nibble Nibble Nibble
~By Margaret Wise Brown
*
Nibble Nibble Nibble
Goes the mouse in my heart
Nibble Nibble Nibble
Goes the mouse in my heart
Nibble Nibble Nibble
Goes the mouse in my heart
And the mouse in my heart is
You.
*
Lippity Lippity Clip
Goes the rabbit in my heart
Lippity Lippity Clip
Goes the rabbit in my heart
Lippity Lippity Clip
Goes the rabbit in my heart
And the rabbit in my heart is
You.
*
Flippity Flippity Flop
Goes the fish in my heart
Flippity Flippity Flop
Goes the fish in my heart
Flippity Flippity Flop
Goes the fish in my heart
And the fish in my heart is
You.
*
Biff Bang Bang
Goes the hammer in my heart
Biff Bang Bang
Goes the hammer in my heart
Biff Bang Bang
Goes the hammer in my heart
And the hammer in my heart is
You.
*
Drum Drum Drum
Goes the drum in my heart
Drum Drum Drum
Goes the drum in my heart
Drum Drum Drum
Goes the drum in my heart
And the drum in my heart is
You.
*
Softly now beats the beat of my heart
Softly now beats the beat of my heart
Softly now beats the beat of my heart
All for the love of you.
*
From the book Nibble Nibble by Margaret Wise Brown. Paintings by Wendell Minor. HarperCollins. 1987.
Check this out to view the beautiful illustrations!
Whether you are heading to the stadium, watching on TV, or signing up to play, baseball season is here! The game of baseball has evolved over time, catching on and becoming uniquely American in the 1850s! Now a national pastime, the game is part of our culture in the form of family traditions, movies, heroes, and even poems! One of the most famous baseball poems is Casey at the Bat. It was written in 1888 by Ernest L. Thayer. This poem tells a gripping tale about a fictional baseball team, the ‘Mudville nine’ and star player, Casey.
Please enjoy this excerpt of Casey at the Bat. Visit the library to check out the complete poem!
Casey at the Bat: A Ballad of the Republic Sung in the Year 1888.
The out look wasn’t brilliant for the Mudville nine that day’
The score stood four to two with but one inning more to play.
And then when Cooney died at first, and Barrows did the same,
A sickly silence fell upon the patrons of the game.
[...]
Then from 5,000 throats and more there rose a lusty yell;
It rumbled through the valley, it rattled in the dell;
It knocked upon the mountain and recoiled upon the flat,
For Casey, mighty Casey, was advancing to the bat.
[...]
Ten thousand eyes were on him as he rubbed his hands with dirt;
Five thousand tongues applauded when he wiped them on his shirt.
Then while the writhing pitcher ground the ball into his hip,
Defiance gleamed in Casey’s eye, a sneer curled Casey’s lip.
Start the Week With Words: Happy Spring!
Posted by: wpbkids on: March 21, 2011
Happy Spring! Celebrate with a poem!
Spring
~By Lee Bennett Hopkins
Roots
sprouts
buds
flowers
always-
always-
cloud-bursting showers
rhymes
April fools
fledglings on wing
no thing
is
newer
or
fresher
than
spring.
From the book: Sharing the Seasons: A Book of Poems. Selected by Lee Bennett Hopkins. Illustrated by David Diaz. Margaret K. McElderry Books. 2010.

Start the Week With Words: Exploring Space!
Posted by: wpbkids on: March 2, 2011
- In: authors | books | Literacy | poems | Poetry | Poetry for children | read alouds | reading | Uncategorized | west palm beach public library
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A few weeks ago, a NASA spacecraft took some pictures of a passing comet!
Click here to see the pictures!
Read this poem about comets and space!
Comet
Ice, rock, dirt,
Metal and gas -
Around the sun
A comet may pass.
A dirty snowball
Of space debris.
The biggest snowball
That you’ll ever see.
- In: authors | books | holidays | Literacy | poems | Poetry | Poetry for children | read alouds | reading | Uncategorized | west palm beach public library
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My ValentineBy Myra Cohn Livingston
My Valentine
Has eyes of green
With twenty eyebrows in between.
Her skin is blue.
Her head is square.
She hasn’t got a brain in there.
Her four ears twitch.
Her noses shine
But still,
(I think,)
I’ll make her mine!
Find this and other themed poetry in Celebrations! By Myra Cohn Livingston.
Start the Week With Words: Have a laugh!
Posted by: wpbkids on: February 7, 2011
- In: authors | books | elementary | Literacy | poems | Poetry | Poetry for children | reading | Uncategorized | west palm beach public library
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A coworker of mine recently shared this website full of silly poetry for kids! It is interactive, allowing you to rate the poem on the Giggle Meter. Be sure to check out the Poetry Class, Poetry Theater, Word Games and more!
Giggle Poetry
To get you in the mood, here is a silly poem from one of our favorite poets, Jack Prelutsky.
Backwards Forwards Silly Rhyme
I thguoht d’I etirw ekil siht yadot
esuaceb ti demees ekil nuf,
ev’I tog on rehto nosaer,
tub I ylerus t’nod deen eno.
tI ylbaborp sesufnoc uoy
eht tsrif emit taht uoy ees
eht sdrow lla nettirw sdrawkcab…
ti osla delzzup em.
tuB won ev’I nettog desu ot ti,
dna ylerus os evah uoy,
dna ev’I a llams noicipsus
taht uoy tsuj thgim yrt ti oot.
From the book, a PIZZA the size of the SUN by Jack Prelutsky. Drawings by James Stevenson. Greenwillow Books, New York. 1994.
Start the Week With Words: Rhymes to Learn!
Posted by: wpbkids on: January 31, 2011
- In: authors | books | early literacy | educational | elementary | Literacy | poems | Poetry | Poetry for children | read alouds | reading | Uncategorized | west palm beach | west palm beach public library
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Poetry can be read for beauty, emotion, action, and to learn! The rhythm and rhyme transform the words from vocabulary and fact to meaningful pieces that stick in your mind. Music too has a great effect on memory.
The following poem is from the book Count me a rhyme: Animal poems by the numbers by Jane Yolen. As children go through the pages, new animals are featured for them to count along with reading or listening to the poem.
To count the rest of your way through the book, check it out today! See below for more poetry that include a lesson.
Six Spiders Spinning
by Jane Yolen
Six spiders spinning
A long and glittering strand;
Six spiders shinnying
Hand over hand over hand over hand,
Hand over hand over hand over hand.
Six spiders throwing
Out a glistering strand;
Six spiders going
Hand over hand over hand over hand,
Hand over hand over hand over hand.
Six spiders hurrying
Down a glistening strand;
Six spiders scurrying
Hand over hand over hand over hand,
Hand over hand over hand over hand.
Six spiders creeping
Upon a glimmering strand;
Six spiders sleeping
Hand over hand over hand over hand,
Hand over hand over hand over hand.
From the book: Count me a rhyme: Animal poems by the numbers. By Jane Yolen. Photographs by Jason Stemple.
Black History Month begins in a few days. There is so much wonderful poetry out there celebrating African American culture. I have listed a number of our books full of poetry.
Check one out today!
Here is one of my favorite children’s poems by Nikki Giovanni.
The Reason I Like Chocolate
By Nikki Giovanni
The reason I like chocolate
is I can lick my fingers
and nobody tells me I’m not polite
I especially like scary movies
’cause I can snuggle with Mommy
or my big sister and they don’t laugh
I like to cry sometimes ’cause
everybody says “what’s the matter
don’t cry”
and I like books
for all those reasons
but mostly ’cause they just make me
happy
and I really like
to be happy
From the book:
In Daddy’s Arms I AM TALL: African Americans Celebrating Father. Illustrated by Javaka Steptoe. Lee & Low Books Inc. 1997.
The Block. Poems by Langston Hughes. The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Viking. 1995.
(includes 1 audio cd. *hear Langston Hughes, Gwendolyn Brooks, Queen Latifa, and more…)























