Out of Wonder Teachers' Guide
Out of Wonder Teachers' Guide
Out of Wonder Teachers' Guide
Po em s C e l e b r at i n g Po e ts
KWAME ALEXANDER
with CHRIS COLDERLEY and MARJORY WENTWORTH
Children will enjoy hearing these poems read aloud, and they will enjoy reading
them independently. As readers grow in their ability to understand with more
complexity and sophistication, and as they experience a greater exposure to
poetry, delight will increase when they discover the influence of the celebrated
poets’ work on the poets and poems in this book.
HC: 978-0-7636-8094-7
Prereading Activities
To introduce students to the idea of creating original art or poetry in honor, celebration,
or appreciation of another artist or writer, choose one or both of these activities. Common Core
Connections
1. Before sharing the book, show students the painting The Starry Night by Vincent
van Gogh (or another famous painting of your liking). Discuss the colors, shapes, This teachers’ guide, with connections to
and subject matter that dominate the painting, then let students create their own the Common Core, provides a variety of
work of art inspired by the one you’ve shared. ways for students in grades 3–8 to interact
with and enjoy the poems in the collection.
2. Provide students with copies of the poems “The Road Not Taken,” “The Pasture,” and Activities and discussion questions are also
“Reluctance” by Robert Frost. After reading these three poems together, share the provided for a deeper dive into the poets
poem “In Every Season” from Out of Wonder. Have students identify how Marjory and poems being celebrated.
Wentworth uses words, phrases, topics, and ideas from Robert Frost’s poems to
create her poem of celebration.
Poets sometimes break or bend rules of capitalization, punctuation, and spelling in order to convey meaning and emotion. What
rules does Kwame Alexander break in this poem? How does it contribute to the poem? How does it mirror the style of the poet
being celebrated?
In your own words, explain one of Chris Colderley’s examples of what poetry is. What concrete example would you use to describe
what poetry is?
“Jazz Jive Jam” celebrating Langston Hughes (page 10) and “Tambourine Things” celebrating Judith Wright (page 23)
Poets use stanzas for many reasons. Sometimes stanzas organize the poem around the rhythm and rhyme scheme. Other times
they direct the reader by creating pauses in the poem or focusing attention on important words or images. Describe how the
poets’ stanza breaks help you as a reader.
A metaphor compares one thing to another without using the words like or as. A metaphor says that one thing is another
unrelated thing. What metaphors does Marjory Wentworth use in this poem? What unlike things does she compare?
“How Billy Collins Writes a Poem” celebrating Billy Collins (pages 18–19)
What are some of the things you notice when you first wake up?
“Walter, Age Ten” celebrating Walter Dean Myers (page 14); “The Music of the Earth” celebrating Pablo Neruda (page 20); and
“Song of Uhuru” celebrating Okot p’Bitek (page 34)
A particular place is important in each of these poems. How did the poets give readers a sense of that place? How are the places
the same? How are they different?
“(Loving) the World and Everything in It” celebrating Mary Oliver (page 24)
Alliteration is the repetition of a sound at the beginning of two or more words in a sentence. Can you describe the time of day
you love most with alliteration, the way Marjory Wentworth names the “miracle of morning”? What other examples of alliteration
can you find in this poem?
“For Our Children’s Children” celebrating Chief Dan George (page 36) and “Majestic” celebrating Maya Angelou (page 40)
In each of these poems, the poets speak directly to the reader. Although their messages are very different, the structures of the
two poems are quite similar. Describe the similarity.
What kind of music makes you happy? Do you ever dance to cheer yourself up?
All the poems in this book were written in appreciation of a poet’s style, themes, or words. Talk about a poet who moves you to
want to write a poem of appreciation.
Integrating
Out of Wonder includes biographies of the celebrated poets in alphabetical order, as well as a list of the
historical periods in which they lived (ancient through contemporary). As a class, make a time line of the
poets, using their birth years, and map the countries in which they were born.
John Steptoe New Talent Illustrator Award for Voice of Freedom: Fannie Lou Hamer, her first picture book, written
by Carole Boston Weatherford.
Marjory Wentworth is the Poet Laureate of South Carolina. She is the author of Noticing Eden and other books of poetry. Her poems
have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize five times. She teaches at the Art Institute of Charleston, and her work is included in the South
Carolina Poetry Archives at Furman University.
Mary Lee Hahn, a teacher-poet who practices her crafts in central Ohio, wrote this guide.