Friday, 3 October 2014

Poetry Workshops for October & November


My poetry workshops for October and November are full of sparks, spooks, thumps, zooms and dazzles!

My theme choices
are Autumn Leaves (and don't groan: leaves are fascinating, fun and full of potential for imagination-flying - see below!), Wild Woods, Giants, Fireworks and Christmas Colours. I love them all; so do the children!

Take those leaves for starters: they're not just old, brown, dilapidated, slippery nuisances, blocking up our gutters and sending us tumbling - although there's plenty for a poem in all that too! They're colour wonders, fragility miracles, sky-decorators, dancers, acrobats, adventurers! In our workshops we may take one and sail with it, over forests and cities, over seas, deserts, jungles. A girl in one of my sessions sent hers to New York and got it driving a taxi (in her poem at least). As for those colours, growing richer by the week, kids bask in their imagery potential! The other day, a five-year-old added, as a little afterthought to a poem about a falling leaf, that it was 'as orange as a tiger in the jungle'.

As for giants - they get everywhere (particularly through school roofs and staffroom walls, I should warn you), with their colossal, crashing feet - heads literally in the clouds. Not that our giant poetry is all about destructive giants, or male ones either. Angelic, sunset-gliding female giants mingled with lonely, gentle giant lads in our poetry sessions at Clarendon Junior School, Wiltshire last week, along with some clumsy, butter-fingered characters that reminded me of myself, and one or two grizzly beasts from pre-historic times too, I should add, whose voices shook the school hall windows.

Wild Woods is another theme that speaks for itself, especially with Halloween round the corner - or behind that tree trunk. My bag of soft toy animals comes into its own here, spurring ideas and language for movements, sounds and atmosphere.

Fireworks is another favourite of mine - and the kids! It has everything: noise, colour,action, drama, mystery, patterns and shapes, hot fire, hot dogs, hot chocolate, and a shiver down your back from a faint owl hoot, perhaps.

My Christmas Colours theme involves everything from fairy lights to traffic lights, and is suitable for children of any or no religion. What does a town look like after dark, for instance?

Further details of my workshops are available on my other website:

http://poemsforfun.wordpress.com/workshops/
Kate

Kate Williams
Children's Poet & Workshop Leader
Email: katewilliams.poetry@gmail.com

Represented by The Poetry Society, Authors Abroad, Authors Aloud UK and Literature Wales.

Monday, 28 April 2014

Summer poetry sessions for schools...



Teachers may be interested to know that I'm currently taking bookings for poetry workshop days for children from Nursery to age 13 (Year 8) in England and Wales.

My summer theme choices are:
Sea, Jungle and Mini-Beasts. Each offers infinite potential for creative thinking and writing, and as I prepare my workshop plans for the term ahead I'm growing ever more excited about the wonderful promise these themes hold in terms of ideas, language, imagery, poetic adventure, illustration, musical accompaniment, acting out, and who knows how much more!

The theme of Sea, for instance, offers up a wealth of popular topics from ship wrecks and pirate treasure to tempests and sea serpents, not forgetting the beauty of a sunlit sea, the fun of seaside splashes and, of course, the beach - another source of wonders and fun! And then there's the power of the sea and the plethora of associated concepts: its vastness, mystery, mood-swings, glory, presence...

Further details of my workshops can be found on my other website, poemsforfun.wordpress.com, Workshops page.

"I loved that, and I hate poetry!" a ten-year-old boy told me after a workshop of mine he'd attended in a Wiltshire primary school. I love them too!

Kate

Tuesday, 15 April 2014

More poems up



I've put various new poems and rhymes on different pages here, and also on the pages of my other website, poemsorfun.wordpress.com, if you care to browse.

These include a newly published poem for children (and adults??) about a dragon - or at least, signs of - as well as a deliciously refreshing (at least, it is to me - that's why I wrote it) rhyme to celebrate the arrival of spring, also on my For kids page, and some frivolities on my Gardening and Humorous pages. Over on my other website, you'll find more of my poems: a mixed assortment for children, adult humorous, and adult thoughtful.

Any comments welcome!

Happy Easter break - if you're getting one,

Kate

Sunday, 6 April 2014

April = spring?


Hooray, it's spring... well, April anyway. That's spring, isn't it? Used to be anyway. (I'm in the UK, by the way, so if you're the other side of the world this particular climate conundrum probably doesn't apply to you.)

Yes, the weeds are all up in my garden, the grass is starting to spring up again in all the wrong places, and the April showers are here... never left last year actually, so I'm hoping some new poem ideas will soon start springing up too, in my pen and eventually on these pages. Will let you know when.

Meanwhile, in case you're a teacher and may be interested, I might as well mention that I'm now preparing my summer term poetry workshop themes. These will include sparkling seasides, wild tempests, sea-bed secrets, and the odd - very odd, probably - sea monster. Jungles are also on my summer agenda, with petrifying prowls, growls and howls amid the twisty tangles below, and mad monkey mayhem in the towering treetops above - or whatever else my classes may wish to conjure up. The fascinating world of insects is also buzzing round my head, inside it, that is - hopefully not outside, though I have encountered the odd spider daring its way into our house recently, and no doubt some kids will be itching to freak me out with more of the things. True, spiders aren't actually insects, but my theme will cover 'mini-beasts' of all nasty, knobbly kinds, and beautiful ones too. Yes, delicate, transparent wings will be flitting before our eyes, and, hopefully, across some of our pages too, through silky blue skies and lush green foliage as we lead the way from one poetry style to another. So despite the ongoing murkiness of the weather, I'm already gearing up for summer, and if it doesn't show up, we'll magic it through our poetry, or rather, the children will. They never let me down!

Will keep you posted of latest poems and other updates meanwhile.

Happy Easter!

Kate

Sunday, 9 March 2014

More humour


This is just to say I've added a few of my light, fun-poking rhymes to my
Humorous page, with more to come soon.

I have an ever-rising stack of them at home - or rather, various stacks in various rooms, with scraps and scribbles forever fluttering around my bed, where most of my ideas begin - on my reading lamp table, under the pillow, the bed, the previous day's yet-to-put-away-clothes, some jottings later ending their days a few feet away, in the bin. 

The roots of these little rhymes, though, spring not from rest but from up-and-about times: from life in our topsy-turvy world of so-called mod-cons and 'state of the art' super-duper living standards, where absurdities are two-a-penny - or rather, with our soaring inflation, one-a-tenner. 

A few decades ago, for instance, I wouldn't have even been writing this blog: wouldn't have been hunched over this little, rectangular, headache-inducing screen, unable to drag myself away from its bizarre lure despite the time of night. No, I'd have been walking off my insomnia round my moonlit garden - better tended and prettier in those days - basking in the cool, fresh air, the twinkly welcome of the stars, the hushed murmurings of furtive and fascinating wildlife: living real life, not virtual. That's how absurd we've got. Okay, I've got - not you, perhaps! Some of us are still, just about, hi-tech-independent, thank goodness.

But even I've had enough of this white screen glare now, so adieu until my next post. Meanwhile, if hungry for humour, you'll find various scraps amongst previous postings here, as well as on other pages, especially the gardening one.

Kate




Monday, 24 February 2014

Poetry frame sheets for schools





Attention UK teachers! Poetry frames to buy!


I have 70 attractive, effective poetry-writing frames available to buy!  
Click Poetry Frames for list, topics and details.

Price (UK) 30p each; minimum charge: 60p.  With accompanying notes: 40p each.


Each sheet has been tried out in classrooms with rewarding results, as confirmed time after time by both pupils and teachers. In fact, teachers invariably ask permission to make copies for future lessons, and that's what spurred me to put them up for sale to all.

The frames cover a wide range of popular topics - list on enquiry - and coming soon to this site. Examples are: Planets, Aliens, Seaside, Pirate Treasure, Castles, Giants, Jungle and Dragons. 

Most of the sheets come in a choice of 2 or 3 grades of difficulty.  The majority are for younger children, in the 4-8 age range, with some for older children too. 

I have designed, produced and hand-illustrated each sheet, tailoring and adjusting them over the years for maximum success.

To buy: please place your orders directly with me, via email @ katewilliams.poetry@gmail.com . If you are a PayPal account-holder, you can pay through PayPal. Otherwise, please send cheque when I have confirmed receipt of your order.

Here is a picture of children using one of my seaside sheets.





Any questions? Do get in touch!

Email: katewilliams.poetry@gmail.com
Twitter @Katypoet
Website: poemsforfun.wordpress.com


Kate



Thursday, 20 February 2014

Exciting times in schools!


Well, who ever said February was a dull month? Perhaps no one where you are, but here in the UK, every type of weather except sunshine has been the order of the day this side of Christmas. But inside the classroom, it's been a different story.

With dragons, space and wild woods as my topic choices this term, children have been conjuring up all sorts for me in schools across the country. We've had dragons charging into staff rooms, planets cartwheeling through black holes, and slimy slugs sliding through swamps - in poetic form, you understand! And acted out too, in some cases.

My old, battered guitar - and old, rusty strumming skills - have come in handy too for word-building songs along the way, including one where we watch out for the [something, something] dragon. You'd be amazed at the weird and wonderful assortment of dragons around: from spotty to invisible; from vicious to protective; from creepy to crazy to downright lazy to skiing to sky-diving to sports car-driving! You name it, a dragon can do it, according to the children in my classes. And as for the children, they can do poetry: they find it in themselves, lurking in odd corners of their souls, as the session rolls out.

In March I shall be including an extra topic - an ambitious one in this new climate of ours, perhaps: spring. If no spring comes, I shall be in for an uphill push to get youngsters enthused in memories of last year's... if we had one then. But children's imagination is a great asset in these situations: they'll create a spring scene as fresh as a March breeze with half a nudge.

It's always the right time for creativity!

Kate