Photo de l'auteur
6+ oeuvres 341 utilisateurs 12 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Avis Harley teaches poetry at the University of British Columbia in the Language Education Department. Ms. Harley has also been an elementary school teacher for many years

Œuvres de Avis Harley

Fly With Poetry: An ABC of Poetry (2000) 76 exemplaires
Leap Into Poetry (2001) 31 exemplaires
Sea Stars: Saltwater Poems (2006) 17 exemplaires
African acrostics (2012) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Sky Magic: Poems (2009) — Contributeur — 46 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
female
Nationalité
Canada
Courte biographie
Avis Harley has written several books of poetry for children, including THE MONARCH'S PROGRESS: POEMS WITH WINGS. She lives in Vancouver.

Membres

Critiques

My children’s poetry book is African Acrostics: A Word in Edgeways. Written by Avis Harley and its pages photographs were provided by Deborah Noyes. I didn’t know that this type of poem is called acrostic, I’ve seen this done as a writing project for second graders using their names early in the school year for a classroom hallway bulletin board. An acrostic is a poetic form where a name or a phrase is found by reading certain letters in the poem downward. Often the phrase is formed by the initial letter of each line. The acrostics in this book are lyrically creative and visually clever. There’s a double acrostic (first and last letters of each line), a cross acrostic (which you find reading it diagonally) and the multiple acrostic (such as the page showing a Horn Bill bird). Each page shows vivid photographs of animals most students have already seen in books and movies such as the Lion King.
The first acrostic poem is called Acrostic and spells out WORD IN EDGEWAYS while the text is informative and playful instruction on how to enjoy this poetry form. This book was a lovely surprise and I hope you find it and enjoy it as well. It looks as fun to read out loud as it is to share its fun and discovery with another.
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Signalé
Lioninthelibrary | 5 autres critiques | Jul 15, 2021 |
Acrostics are a fun and simple type of poetry. I feel as though a book like this would be good to read when discussing different forms of poetry. Young and Adolescent students would enjoy the art of writing an acrostic poem. When reading the poem to younger audiences you could challenge the students by asking them to decipher what the acrostic spelled out and how it relates to the poem.
 
Signalé
CLEBLANC0 | 5 autres critiques | Nov 25, 2018 |
This book contains color photographs of various African animals, each with a lighthearted poem that contains an acrostic. While some of the acrostics simply spell the name of the animals, others expand the topic of the poem. There are varying rhythms in the poems and some are more serious than others. Included in the book is a nice biography of the author and photographer. The last page explains how the photographer captured many of the photos for the book-quite interesting. There are two pages of more information about each animal included in the acrostics. Also included are two pages explaining acrostics.
This is a fantastic book for introducing students to a common type of poetry-acrostics. The possible curricular activities for this book are endless.
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Signalé
jardeed91 | 5 autres critiques | Feb 26, 2017 |
This is a very simple book, meant to give a varied version of the acrostic poem, set adjacent to photos of the African animals in which they describe. At first I thought it would be a repetition of the first poem, "A Croc Acrostic," with the first letters of each word spelling CROCODILE. But the author took it in a fun direction. Like the poem about hippopotamuses which spells RIVER REVERIE. But my favorite was perhaps the poem about giraffes which spelled SKY FRIENDS. It was cute.

I don't really know how I would describe a theme for a book filled with gimmicky poetry that describes animals. It's fun, and it's certainly a beneficial text for elementary students when they come across this form...but I don't know about any overarching theme.

The only use I could think for this would be in a lesson about acrostic poetry, in which this text, or this and others, are used as a guide to writing their own poems.
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Signalé
JFinnegan | 5 autres critiques | Jan 27, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
6
Aussi par
1
Membres
341
Popularité
#69,903
Évaluation
4.1
Critiques
12
ISBN
14

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