Poems presentations - Group work activities

  • Below you will find the link for a folder with several poems for different age groups and about different subjects that can be used for group work activities and presentations.

    https://bit.ly/2U7fFhD

    Poem presentations from Bragança - 10th grade

    Throughout the second term 10th grade students from Emídio Garcia read poems and prepared oral presentations where they had to speak about the author, the meaning of the poem, their opinion on it and also present the poem to their classmates in a ceative way. Here are some of the videos created by them.

    Aphasia by Brian Patten

    I

    If by Rudyard Kipling

    A poison tree, by William Blake

    On girls lending pens by Taylor Mali

    Tonight at noon by Adrien Henri

    The magic box by Kit Wright

    Invictus by W. E. Henley

    Phenomenal woman by Maya Angelou

    No by Brian Patten

    What teachers make by Taylor Mali

    Faceless by Benjamin Zephaniah

    Whatif by Shell Silverstein

    The paradoxical commandments by K. M. Keith

    Autobiography in five chapters by Portia Nelson

    The work on Giacomo Leopardi's Infinito by some students (11C) at Agrupamento de Escolas Emídio Garcia- Bragança

    Another work on Infinity by Giacomo Leopardi

    Infinity.pdf

    It was a great opportunity for Polish students to create a new poetry form as well as cooperate in groups. That time younger students made drawings and their elder friend recorded her recitation.

    'IT WASN'T ME' by Steve Turner

    by Klara and Ewa 6B

    MASKS by Shel Silverstein

    Madeira

    Students in Escola Basica e Secundária Gonçalves Zarco enjoyed reciting our partners' poems. It gave them a chance to get to know a bit of what each country's literature has to offer.

    Here's our take on two poems by Polish poet Wislawa Szymborska:

    One of our Senior College's student, who loves Italian, took this chance to also take part in sharing and enjoying our partner's poetry.

    Here's her take of "L'infinito" by Giacomo Leopardi.