NJ Poetry Out Loud

Today I’m leading a professional development seminar for NJ High School teachers associated with NJ Poetry Out Loud. This is my first time working with the organization, and I’m eager to evangelize for Wordnik, the non-profit online dictionary, and to talk to teachers about how to use Dictionaries as a tool for the reading, performance, and composition of poetry.

Workshop Description:

Word Play: Poetry, Dictionaries, and the Power of Play
Dr. Felicia Jean Steele

play, v. played, play·ing, plays
v.intr.
1. To occupy oneself in an activity for amusement or recreation: children playing with toys.
2.
a. To take part in a sport or game: He’s just a beginner and doesn’t play well.
b. To participate in betting; gamble.
3.
a. To behave in a teasing or joking manner; act in jest or sport: She’s not angry with you; she’s just playing.
b. To deal or behave carelessly or indifferently, especially for one’s own amusement; toy: She isn’t interested in you; she’s just playing with you.
4. To act or conduct oneself in a specified way: play fair; an investor who plays cautiously.
5. To act, especially in a dramatic production.
. . .

The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition

We don’t necessarily think about dictionaries as a “playful” literary genre, and our students may not think about dictionaries at all. But just as poetry has various rules of composition—meter, rhyme, specific spacing on the page—dictionaries have formal elements that may be intimidating to our students and may be obstacles to our using them in the classroom to the greatest benefit.

This workshop will explore the possibilities for using dictionaries for poetic play, for encouraging the composition of new poems and for encouraging greater comprehension of existing poems. Teachers will leave the workshop with greater knowledge about how lexicographers (dictionary writers) do their work, about how different kinds of dictionaries work and about what those dictionaries reflect about the language. They will also leave with a set of exercises and open access resources that they can use in the classroom.

Materials:

I’ve produced a Powerpoint (Word play) and a Lesson Plan for the workshop participants.