"I loved watching how the students of various age
levels approached the project and I was humbled and
touched to read their poetry. Best of all, though,
was their pride in seeing a completed flag line, to
know that they were a part of it."
--Terri C.
Pre-K Parent Helper |
Connecting Your
Dreams!
After we've created
our Dream Flag Lines, there are so many ways to
share the poetry and the art. Below are some
ideas for sharing student work and connecting to
others in the project. Please send your own
ideas for us to post here!
Poetry Pizza:
Step-by-step plan for getting together with
another Dream Flag school.
Sharing Dreams On-Line:
Web publishing student Dream poems on this site.
Poetry
Pizza
printable
page
Here's an plan for getting together with
another Dream Flag School to share Dream Flags
with another school. This is based on a
get-together between one sixth grade of about 60
students and another one of nearly the same
size. Here's how it worked:
Summary: Students from two schools got together on a
school day in the morning, shared poetry, and
ended having lunch together. It started with a
group gathering, then broke into small groups to
share poems. There was a snack, then we got
together in a large group to share some poems
with the whole group, to connect our Dream
Flags, and then sing. After that, we had pizza
together. Then the visiting school went home.
Materials/Supplies and Set-Up
-
Tags: Take the total
number of students and divide it by 10 or 12.
This is a good size for small groups to
share poetry--enough so there can be
discussion, and not too many to have enough
time. We had about 120 students, so it was 10
small groups.
-
Get two different colors of
name tags, the same number of each. For each
color, letter the tags A, B, C, etc. for the
number of groups you will have. (E.g. for 10
groups, A -J.) Put the letter in a corner so
there's space for the name. Keep the colors
separate, but mix up the tags in each color.
For our groups, we labeled 60 red tags
with A-J , so we had 5 A's, 6 B's, 6 C's,
etc. We also labeled 60 green tags with A-J
in the same way (so there are a total of 10
A's, 10 B's, etc.) We mixed up each color
group.
-
Space: You will need
a space for the small group gatherings and
for a large group gathering. You can use one
large space such as a gym if you designate
areas for the small groups in the large
space. Mark spots for each small group to
meet with a letter poster or some other
indicator of the small group. (Have
microphone if possible for poetry reading to the
whole group.) We used a dining are with
tables that
would seat ten along with a nearby gym. We
put a paper with a large letter -- A, B, C,
etc. -- on each table.
-
Food: Arrange a snack
and lunch for the group. They could bring
their own. We used orangsicles which we called "dreamcicles."
We ordered plain pizza and had milk cartons
from the cafeteria.
-
Dream Flags and Poems:
Each school must have completed their Dream
Flag Lines and have them on hand. The host
school should lay out flags on the floor in
the big space or hang them in some simple
way that can easily be taken down. We set up our flags in the gym. We just
draped them over some hooks along the wall.
This was along one side of the gym (facing
the stage) so the other group could line
theirs up on the other side.
-
Each student must have a
paper copy of his/her poem. This is to share
in the small groups. If possible, students
should practice reading their poems aloud in
advance. Option: Have students also practice
some kind of choral recitations of Hughes poetry
to share with the whole group.
-
Optional Music Activity:
Have each teacher involved pick out two or three
lines from a few poems in each section and send
them to a music person. These get compiled into
a listing of lines from both schools to be sung
at a certain time in the program.
We did this with email and had each teacher
choose two groups of lines from each section.
The result was around fifteen "verse" lines to
be sung as part of The Dream Flag Song.
Process, Timing and People
You need one adult for each
small group. You could do it with fewer, but
the poetry sharing will work better with an
adult to facilitate. You need a teacher
leader of the day. To do the music, you need
someone who can play and sing.
Here's s possible schedule. This is
for a total time of 2 1/2 hours.
-
Arrival of guest school.
Assignment of name tags. Assignment of teachers
to letter groups. Lay out guest school flags in
whole group area. (10 min.)
-
Opening whole group gathering.
Explanation of what will happen. Singing of "The
Dream Keeper Song." (Sheet
Music.
Recording. with optional verses. (To
do the verses, you need someone who can
improvise melody and play an instrument such as
guitar. After each chorus of "The Dream Keeper
Song," the music leader improvises singing of
the verses from student poems provided ahead of
time. --See 7 above. You can omit this and just
sing the chorus, teaching it by rote. (15 min.)
-
Get into small groups for
readings according to letter on your tag. Each
students has a paper copy of his/her poem.
Teachers go to letter groups. (10 min.)
-
Small group readings. Each
student reads his/her Dream Flag poem for the
group. After each, the others should comment
about what they like in the poem and ask any
questions of the poet. The teacher facilitates.
Each group also has to select one person from
the group to read his/her poem to the whole
group--or simply find someone who's willing.
This could also be done at random (guess the
number) from those who are willing. (25 minutes)
-
Snack break. (15 min.)
-
Whole group gathering. Selected
readers from each small group read poems to
whole group. Good to have a microphone for this.
This may be followed by choral performances of
Hughes poetry from students.
-
Set up for connection of Dream
Flag lines. This means you designate students to
carry the extended Dream Flag lines (about one
student every 10 feet of line) and have them
lift and hold up the lines for people to see.
They should process toward the front of the
space and the two "ends" will meet in the middle
where you can tie them ceremonially, connecting
your dreams. (10 min.)
-
Sing another chorus of "The
Dream Keeper Song" while students hold up
connected flags. Closing remarks. (15 min.)
-
Break before lunch. (5 min.)
-
Lunch together. (30 min.)
-
Guest school departs.
Here is the schedule we used for
the day. It worked fairly well. The singing took
more time than we expected.
example schedule
Sharing
Dreams On-Line
printable page
One way to share poems both within your school community and
with Dream Flag schools everywhere is to post the pomes in our
Gallery
of Poems on
the Dream Flags web site. This is also a great place to have
students read and think about the poems from other participating
schools. It includes links for sending email back to the
schools.
(One middle school class used
a comparison assignment to help students read,
think about, and compare Dream Flag Poems. See
attached sheet.)
To publish to poems, they need
to be typed and mailed as attachment to
dreamflags@agnesirwin.org.
Here are some details
to remember:
- Please
list the author's first name and last
initial. We don't publish student last
names on the site.
- If you
get them to us by third week in March, we can
have them up on the site by April 1, the
beginning of National Poetry Month, and the time
when we plan to be connecting our Dream Flags in
different ways. You can send them any time
after that as well, and they'll be put up as
soon as possible.
- Be sure
to include the name of your school and the
grade(s) of the students who wrote the poems.
- You
don't need to send all of the poems.
Samples are be fine.
- It is
best to email a Microsoft Word document attachment with
the poems on it. We can deal with other
formats if Word is not available.
- If
you'd like to send any pictures of the students
or of their flags along with the poems, we'll
put them in as well, and it's a great addition.
If you have questions about
how to do this, please email
dreamflags@agnesirwin.org.7
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