This same year, scholar Ann Terry conducted a touchstone study of the poetry preferences of elementary school students finding a predilection for rhyme, narrative, and humor. Her study is still cited as the baseline for where to start in sharing poetry with children.
Contemporary Connections
Even though he passed away, Silverstein’s poetry continues with this posthumous collection:
Silverstein, Shel. 2011. Every Thing On It. New York: HarperCollins.
And for more humor and outrageousness, check out Katz, Katz, and Katz:
Image credit: JohnLund.com |
Katz, Alan. 2011. Poems I Wrote When No One Was Looking. Simon & Schuster.
Katz, Bobbi. 2001. A Rumpus of Rhymes: A Book of Noisy Poems. Dutton.
Katz, Bobbi. 2004. Pocket Poems. Dutton.
Katz, Bobbi. 2009. More Pocket Poems. Dutton.
Katz, Bobbi. 2009. The Monsterologist; A Memoir in Rhyme. Sterling.
Katz, Susan. 2002. Mrs. Brown on Exhibit: And Other Museum Poems. Simon & Schuster.
Katz, Susan. 2004. A Revolutionary Field Trip: Poems of Colonial America. Simon & Schuster.
Katz, Susan. 2007. Oh, Theodore! Guinea Pig Poems. Clarion.
Katz, Susan. 2011. The President’s Stuck in the Bathtub: Poems About U.S. Presidents.
What’s up with those funny Katzes?!
Posting by Sylvia M. Vardell © 2013. All rights reserved.
Image credits: HarperCollins
2 comments:
LOVE those KATZes!
And Alan Katz will be at IRA. I met him at NYSRA this year. He is a hoot! And a really nice guy.
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