Recommended Grades: 4-6
  Using an adorable panda, Koo, Jon J. Muth challenges readers to stretch their minds and imaginations with twenty-six haiku about the four seasons. In the author’s note, Muth explains that haiku has evolved over time and now poets no longer adhere to the rigid structure of 5-7-5 syllables. Instead, Muth uses sensory images to capture a moment of emotion in words.
  Lesson Idea:


Mentor Text: Author’s Craft/Word Choice: Read aloud Hi, Koo!: A Year of Seasons and discuss how haiku has evolved over time. Look at several of the haiku and talk about Muth’s use of sensory details instead of the typical 5-7-5 syllable structure. Using  Hi, Koo!: A Year of Seasons
 and discuss how haiku has evolved over time. Look at several of the haiku and talk about Muth’s use of sensory details instead of the typical 5-7-5 syllable structure. Using  Hi, Koo!: A Year of Seasons as a mentor text for author’s craft, encourage students to write haiku that develops through sensory images, instead of the traditional, rigid 5-7-5 syllable structure.
 as a mentor text for author’s craft, encourage students to write haiku that develops through sensory images, instead of the traditional, rigid 5-7-5 syllable structure.
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Filed under: 
author's craft, 
Hi Koo! A Year of Seasons, 
mentor texts, 
Poetry, 
teaching with picture books, 
word choice Tagged: 
author's craft, 
haiku, 
Hi Koo! A Year of Seasons, 
Jon J Muth, 
mentor texts, 
Poetry, 
teaching with picture books, 
word choice  
   
    
    
    
        Published on June 23, 2014 03:30