Department of Education: Learning Activity Sheet Template Creative Writing Writing A Short Poem
Department of Education: Learning Activity Sheet Template Creative Writing Writing A Short Poem
Department of Education: Learning Activity Sheet Template Creative Writing Writing A Short Poem
Department of
Education
LEARNING ACTIVITY SHEET TEMPLATE
CREATIVE WRITING
Writing a Short Poem
Name of Learner:
Grade Level:
12
C. Directions/ Instructions
After going through with this unit, you are expected to:
1. Read and follow each directions carefully.
2. Accomplish each activity for the mastery of competency.
3. Use the Learning Activity Sheets with care.
4. Record your points for each activity
5. Try to work on your own, if guidance is needed you may call, text or
chat your teacher.
6. Major requirement in this subject is your safety.
D. Exercises / Activities
DAY 1
D.1 INTRODUCTION
a. What I need to Know
After going through with this unit, you are expected to:
Realize the unique features of creative writing by noting the difference
between creative writing and technical writing
Recognize the different specific forms of poetry
Identify the different reasons, principles and writing process.
Create short poetry of specific forms adhering to its structure and
Republic of the Philippines
Department of
Education
characteristics
● Write a one stanza poem about a given topic following the steps of writing as
preliminary activity for the lesson.
Directions. Are you fond of writing? Do you find it easy to write or does it take time
before you could start writing? Below are pictures which may illustrate your views
about writing. Choose one picture that reveals your idea about the writing task, and
state your reasons. Here are some questions to guide you in this activity.
Is it easy to choose a topic for writing? Do you prefer writing with a given topic?
How do you prepare writing? Do you consider your readers and their interests?
What problems do you often encounter in writing? Share your experience if any?
Picture 1 Picture 2
Picture 3 Picture 4
Activity 2. MAPPING OF THE MIND
Directions. Let us now assess what you already know about creative writing by
creating two (2) mind maps of words that you can relate with the concepts
CREATIVE WRITING and TECHNICAL WRITING. Make sure you will write at least
10 words/ phrases for each concept. Use another sheet of paper.
CREATIVE WRITING
TECHNICAL WRITING
Activity 3: TITTLE-TATTLE
Directions. Let us have a short chit chat about some tips of poets on writing poetry.
Read the two poems below, complete the table below by listing down the poets’
suggestions to new poets.
4. 4.
5. 5.
DAY 2
D. 2 DEVELOPMENT
a. What I Know?
Directions. School is a great place to make friends-and friends can be a great topic
for poetry because we know so much about them. What WORDS come to mind
when you think about your friends?
Directions. Create a poem for your friends. Use the poem “We Could Be Friends,”
by Myra Cohn Livingston as a model.
We Could Be Friends
We could be friends
Like friends are supposed to be.
You, picking up the telephone
Calling me
b. What’s In
Directions. You should bear in mind that the more honest you are in your poetry, the
better. This is probably the only rule that you should rely on all the time. If you’re not
honest with yourself in your poetry, no one else is going to feel anything genuine
when they read your work. It can be painfully terrifying to open up and honestly
express your feelings on paper, but that’s the name of the game.
Read the poem, “On the Grass” by Guillermo E. Castillo. Note how honesty is carried
out.
On the Grass
Dear God,
It is understood that
This will not oblige me in any way.
On My Own
Dear God,
Directions: Identify the kind of poem according to its number of lines and other
features.
Directions. See if you can spot what is unusual about "Square Poem" by Lewis
Carroll, below. Once you've figured it out or have given up, mouse over any of the
words in the first line, or over any of the first words of each line.
ALL BOXED UP
Silence is the language of my heart,
is the song that was, and remains
the music of my solitary existence, the misunderstood
language of weakling- a nobody who just passes by…
Of all the things I love and hate, this-
my silence – what makes me me, so my cruel
heart remains misunderstood by this cruel world.
Write a Lewis Carroll-style "Square Poem". Lewis Carroll created his own version of
the Square Poem: made up of 6 lines of 6 words each, that reads the same across
or up and down.
DAY 4
c. What is It?
Directions. Read the short descriptions and examples of the specific types of
poetry. Then, try to create your own individual entry for each type.
Blank Verse
A poem of consistent length and meter but do not employ rhyme. There is consistent
meter in 10 syllables of each line. It is following the iambic pentameter pattern with
five feet in each line. Only the first line is written in trochee pattern. All the stressed
syllables are marked in bold.
Mending Walls (By Robert Frost) Something there is that doesn’t love a wall.
hat sends the frozen-ground-swell under it,
nd spills the upper boulders in the sun;
Free Verse
A poem without standard rhyme patterns, line and length
Little Shelter Cat by Kelly Roper I walked into the shelter and looked around.
Out of all the homeless kitties, you stood out like a beacon.
I picked you up, and you purred and snuggled sweetly in my arms.
It was like we had always known each other, always been together.
I filled out the form, made the donation, and took you home.
Limerick
A poem consisting of five lines wherein lines one, two, and five and lines three and
four are rhyming.
Tanaga
The Tagalog tanaga, which dates back to 1500, has been referred to as the
Philippine equivalent of the Japanese haiku, but this is totally wrong. Tanaga is a
poem composed of four lines with each line having seven syllables, written in aaaa
or aabb, abba, or abab rhyming pattern. Tanaga have no titles. Below is an example
of a tanaga.
Dalit
Dalit is another type of short Filipino poem, composed of four lines with eight
syllables in each line. It was very popular during the Spanish period, and the friars
used dalit to promote Catholicism. Here is an example of dalit.
The first line is one word which is the title of the poem.
The second line contains two words which are adjectives that describe the title.
The third line has three words that tell the reader more about the subject of the poem
or shows action. Many times these words are gerunds that end with "ing."
The fourth line has four words that show emotions about the subject of the poem and
may be individual words or a phrase.
The fifth line is one word that is a synonym of the title or is very similar to it.
Here are some examples of this form of cinquain:
Watermelon Watermelon Juicy, sweet
Dripping, slurping, smacking So messy to eat
Yummy
Acrostic Poems
Acrostic poems, also known as name poems, spell out names or words with the first
letter in each line. While the author is doing this, they're describing someone or
something they deem important. Here are two examples to illustrate the poetic
form.
Alexis by Nicholas Gordon
Alexis seems quite shy and somewhat frail,
Leaning, like a tree averse to light, Evasively away from her delight.
X-rays, though, reveal a sylvan sprite, Intense as a bright bird behind her veil, Singing to the moon through