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To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks

To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

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Page 1: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

To Young Readers

by Gwendolyn Brooks

Page 2: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Before we read the poem....

Your teacher is going to show you a picture onthe next slide. Briefly look at the picture (3-5seconds) and tell a partner/your group whatyou think the picture is mainly about.

Page 3: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

from Look-Alikes by Joan Steiner

Page 4: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

First Read

I think that the picture is mainly about _______.

Page 5: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Now let’s “reread” the picture by zooming in on a particular feature (no time limit).

What do you notice when “rereading” thepicture that you did not notice on your first“quick read”?

Page 6: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture
Page 7: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Now let’s “reread” the picture by zooming in on a different part.

What do you notice when “rereading” this partof the picture that you did not notice on yourfirst “quick read”?

Page 8: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture
Page 9: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

And one more reread…

What do you notice when “rereading” this partof the picture that you did not notice on yourfirst “quick read”?

Page 10: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture
Page 11: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Has your “reading” of this picture changed in any way, now that you’ve “reread” and analyzed certain parts of it more carefully?

Explain your thinking to a partner.

Page 12: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

When we read poems, it is usually helpful to read the poem more than once.

On the first read, we get the overall “feel” of the poem.

But usually, the more we reread and analyze different aspects of the same poem, the more “discoveries” we make about it that we didn’t pick up on the first time.

Rereading is a helpful skill that good readers use with all types of text. When you “seek” new insights through rereading, you will usually “find” them.

Page 13: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Structure of Poetry

Poetry is usually arranged in lines.

A group of lines is called a stanza.

Poems may have a regular rhyme, which is the repetition of similar sounds.

A rhyme scheme is the pattern formed by end rhymes.

Page 14: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Free Verse• Poetry that has no fixed pattern of meter, rhyme,

line length, or stanza arrangement• Traditional rules are ignored• Techniques such as repetition and alliteration are

sometimes used to create musical patterns

Definition adapted from Glencoe Texas Treasures, Literary Terms Handbook, p. R4

Structure of Poetry

Page 15: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Structure of Poetry

The speaker of the poem is the person/animal/thing who is “speaking” in the poem.

CAUTION: The author of the poem is not always the speaker in the poem. For example, I might write a poem in which the speaker is a young boy, a cloud, or a dog.

Page 16: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Imagery

Poets use imagery, or language that appeals to the senses, to help readers visualize what they read. It creates an image in the reader’s mind.

Figurative language communicates ideas beyond the literal meanings of words.

•A simile uses like or as to compare seemingly unlike things.

•A metaphor implies the comparison instead of directly stating it.

•Poets use personification to write about an idea, an object, or an animal as if it were human.

•An idiom is an expression whose meanings cannot be understood by simply joining the meanings of the words.

Page 17: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

A metaphor is a figure of speech that compares or equates things in a fresh way. For example:

He was a tornado, blasting his way through the opposing team.

Gwendolyn Brooks Uses Metaphor in “To Young Readers”

Page 18: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Gwendolyn Brooks Also UseSymbolism in “To Young Readers”

• With a partner/small group, talk about what the following images are might symbolize.

• Record your ideas on a response board/Post-it note/chart paper.

Page 19: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

What might be good symbols for …?

• persistence• dreams• a lifetime• confusion

Brainstorm with a

partner.

Page 20: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Reading Purpose

Read to find out how the speaker feels about books. How does she use symbolism and metaphors to express her ideas?

Page 21: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

First Impressions• What questions do you have?

Underline any confusing parts/words.

• What is the overall tone/mood? Mostly positive? Mostly negative? Some of both?

• What do you think is the main idea of the poem? Why do you think the author wrote the poem? What is the speaker trying to say?

• Underline any striking phrases/lines. What do you like about it? What caught your attention?

Page 22: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Free Verse• Poetry that has no fixed pattern of meter, rhyme, line

length, or stanza arrangement• Traditional rules are ignored• Techniques such as repetition and alliteration are

sometimes used to create musical patterns

How can you tell that “To Young Readers” is written in free verse?

Definition adapted from Glencoe Texas Treasures, Literary Terms Handbook, p. R4

Structure of Poetry

Page 23: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Let’s Reread and Think Again…

As we reread, think about the metaphors that the poet used.

• How does visualizing the metaphor help you understand its meaning?

• What might be the connections between books/reading and the items with which they are compared?

• What do you think the poet is really trying to say about books/reading?

Page 24: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Good books arebandages

• What is the usual function/use of bandages?

• How could that be similar to the function of books?

Page 25: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

and voyages

• What is the usual purpose of voyages?

• How could that be similar to the purpose of books?

Page 26: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

and linkages to Light;

• What is the usual function/use light?

• How could that be similar to the function of books?

Page 27: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

are keys

• What is the usual function/use of a key?

• How could that be similar to the function of books?

Page 28: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

and hammers,

• What is the usual function/use of a hammer?

• How could that be similar to the function of books?

Page 29: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

ripe redeemers,

• What is the usual function/use of a redeemer?

• How could that be similar to the function of books?

Page 30: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

dials

• What is the usual function/use of a dial?

• How could that be similar to the function of books?

Page 31: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

and bells

• What is the usual function/use of a bell?

• How could that be similar to the function of books?

Page 32: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

and healing hallelujah.

• How could a “hallelujah” be healing?

• How could that be similar to the function of books?

Page 33: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Good books are good nutrition.

• What is the usual function/use of a nutritious food?

• How could that be similar to the function of books?

Page 34: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

A reader is a Guestnourished, by riches of the Feast,

• How is a guest treated at a feast? What are some different ways that a guest at a feast might be nurtured?

• How could that be similar to what books do for readers?

Page 35: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

to lift,

• What is the usual function/use of lifting?

• How might books lift readers?

Page 36: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

to launch,

• What is the usual function/use of launching?

• How might books launch readers?

Page 37: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

and to applaud the world.

• What is the usual function/use of applause?

• How might books “applaud the world”?

Page 38: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

So, What Do You Think Now?

How does the speaker feels about books? How does she use symbolism and metaphors to express her ideas?

Page 39: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Author’s/Speaker’s AttitudeText ONLY Me / My

Feelings

TONE

What is the author/speaker thinking and feeling as they write this text?

Page 40: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

So, how would you describe the tone of the poem?

• Share your idea with a partner.

• Support your idea by referring to the text and explaining your thoughts to your partner.

Page 41: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Topic

The topic of a selection is its subject (what the selection is about). A topic (unlike a theme) can usually be stated in one word or a short phrase.

A theme is stated in a complete sentence.

Example:

Topic: Friendship

Theme: True friendship can endure hardships.

Page 42: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Theme

The theme of a selection is its central idea. It is the author’s message about life and the common human experience. It is the author’s “gift” to us, the readers.

Sometimes the theme is stated. Many times, the reader must make inferences in order to determine the theme.

Page 43: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Theme

Work with a partner to state and record a theme of “To Young Readers.” •Explain your thinking with evidence from the poem

Page 44: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Hmmmm . . . .

Why do you think the poet capitalized the words “Light,” “Guest,” and “Feast”?

Page 45: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

“The Library” by Jacob Lawrence

•What seems to be the attitude of these people toward books?

•How do the artist’s choice of colors affect the tone/mood of the poem?

•How does this picture connect to the poem?

Page 46: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

• How has my thinking about/understanding of this poem changed since the first time I read it?

• What did I learn that might help me better understand/appreciate the next poem that I read?

Final Thoughts

Page 47: To Young Readers by Gwendolyn Brooks. Before we read the poem.... Your teacher is going to show you a picture on the next slide. Briefly look at the picture

Challenge!

Read other poems AND/OR record and analyzesome of your favorite song lyrics.• What other examples of symbolism can you

find?• What other examples of metaphor can you

find?• What is the effect of the use of symbolism and

metaphor in those poems/song lyrics?