Sunday, August 24, 2014

Really Good Radio

There are amazing resources in radio storytelling and documentaries available free online. You can stream from websites or subscribe to various podcasts for free on iTunes. Never be bored on a long journey again - get downloading!

Here are some of the best:

This American Life
Produced by Chicago Public Media, This American Life is a hugely successful radio program on NPR that brings its audience amazing stories based around a specific theme every week.

Memorable episodes include: Act V and Middle School. Leaving Cert Students might be especially interested in a recent episode entitled 'How I Got into College'.  Act 2's amazing story about a Bosnian refugee Emir Kamenica is mind-blowing.
Snap Judgement is also from NPR and also features brilliant storytelling - as it says itself - with a beat.

RadioLab
For those with an interest in Science or just fascinated by the world around us RadioLab is a treasure trove of mad facts and gripping stories.
Episodes include: the Bad Show and What a Slinky Knows.

BBC Radio 4
There are mountains of great stuff available from BBC Radio 4 from documentaries to drama to great comedy...Find some funny here.

Let me know if you've found any other great radio podcasts out there and enjoy :)

Long-form Legwork

Plath the Poetic Minx
Preparing for Leaving Cert English is all about Shakespeare, poetry, novels and yet more literature - right? No doubt you're getting that impression from your hard-working English teacher who is stuffing your school bag with notes on all of the above in order that you won't be caught out with a tricky question about Banquo or stuck if Plath has the brazen cheek not to appear on the paper two years running.

In fact only 45% of your exam paper in June will comprise of literature that you have previously studied.  A whacking 55% of your marks will be graded on your response to material you've never seen before.  You can have studied Macbeth till the Scottish cows come home and still be floored by an unusual Paper One theme or composition titles that don't quite fit your amazing story about getting signed to Real Madrid.

Your English teacher does know this and will undoubtedly be practicing comprehensions, compositions and unseen poems with you throughout the year.  Wouldn't you like to have the edge over other students however? Wouldn't you like to know a secret that will make Paper One a doddle for you and, make study, dare we suggest it, fun?

Here's my answer: 

Read long-form journalism on the internet. 

Wha-form journalism?I hear you ask

Long-form journalism.

Basically it's the anti-soundbite - long, well-researched, well-written articles on fascinating stories, events and happenings that take somewhat longer to read than the average tweet but reward you with new insight, entertainment and hopefully something gruesome to tell the family over dinner.  This website will tell you a little of the value of long-form: ReadMatter.

There are tons of great articles freely available on the internet if you know where to find them.  Follow this 3 step programme and you will be well on your way to a mind-blowingly brilliant Paper One:


Step 1: Get the Pocket App for your computer, laptop, tablet, smartphone or digital sunglasses (you don't have a pair? they'll be everywhere in 2013).  It's a very simple but fantastically useful app that saves any great article, video or webpage that you stumble across but don't have time to read right that second to your device.  It displays your selected content in an easy to read manner and when you sit down with a nice cup of tea after dinner you can kick back and read a fascinating article about the 50 coolest book covers ever or how toast became the hippest snack in San Francisco.  Yes the internet is truly a wonderland.


Step 2: Set up a Twitter account if you haven't gotten one already and subscribe to newspapers, magazines and websites that feature this sort of journalism or track down websites and bookmark them or subscribe to RSS feeds where possible.  Some examples:
Great excuse for 'borrowing' parent figure's iPads


3: Make time for reading from your Pocket app at least once a day for half an hour and make it enjoyable.  Big cup of tea or hot chocolate, comfy armchair by the fire or sunniest spot in the house, tell your parents you're studying and want no interruptions (milk Leaving Cert sympathy for all it's worth this year) Believe me - it will beat Home & Away hands down.

***** Optional*****

Step 4: For the really hungry writers out there - why not have a go at writing in this style yourself? Very few students (not to mind professional writers) can produce a really good short story in 70 minutes in an exam and yet most attempt the story over any other form.  Reading an article on something a student has researched or is well-informed on is usually much more interesting and enjoyable to the teacher/examiner than yet another story about the time you got signed to Man Utd. (We really do get a lot of these essays).

And there you have it - 3 (or 4) steps to a better Paper One AND you get to drink lots of tea - Simps.  


Good luck!

Paper 2 in Brief

This article first appeared in the Irish Independent Written Word supplement in March 2014.

English Paper Two is 3 hours 20 minutes long, the longest single exam paper you will sit in June. It’s 200 marks in 200 minutes which makes timing answers spectacularly easy: you have 60 minutes for your Single Text, 70 minutes for the Comparative and 70 minutes for your poetry section (20 for Unseen and 50 for the Studied poet). Give yourself these time limits when you practice exam questions as poor time management is the number one reason good students get bad grades.

The most important thing to remember for this paper is answering the question. Not learning off a million Macbeth quotations, not memorising what the textbook said about a particular poet; answering the question. I’d almost write it one last time in italics if I felt it would help…oh to hell with it: ANSWER THE QUESTION!! Please, please, please focus your energies entirely on the question on the paper. Read it ever so carefully and do your best to show the examiner that you are answering it clearly.

Give yourself a few minutes before you start writing each essay to plan a coherent structure for your answer: a clear introduction where you address the question from the very first line, a main body divided into well-defined paragraphs that each deal with a particular point and a conclusion that wraps up all your arguments into a nice neat bow (or at least a solid knot).

Use quotations to back up your points.  Try to integrate them naturally into your points so they don’t interrupt the flow of your writing. For example:
Macbeth, on the other hand, is driven by his ‘o’er vaulting ambition’ to take Duncan’s life and is, therefore, ultimately responsible for his own tragic end. 

If you want to use a slightly longer ‘block’ quotation start on the next line and indent it. It should follow clearly from the previous sentence and on to the one that follows. For example:
The dashes contribute to the rhythm of the poems echoing the natural cadences of human speech.  An example from ‘I taste a liquor never brewed’:
‘Inebriate of Air – am I –
And Debauchee of Dew -
When I read these lines aloud I hear a colloquial effect and a hint of Dickinson’s wry, dry humour.

The Single Text

The Single Text will be the one that you’ve spent most time on, so you will naturally feel the urge to write every last thing you’ve memorised about it onto your exam script. Don’t.  Only use material that is relevant to the question.

Single Text questions for the most part focus on the following areas of study: characters, themes, plot stages, language and imagery.  Most questions ask for your opinion on one or more of these topics so it’s advisable to start formulating your opinions NOW.

For those studying Macbeth for their single text, be able to answer questions like the following: Do you have any sympathy for either Macbeth or Lady Macbeth despite their evil deeds? What do you think the significance of the Witches/Banquo/Macduff is in the play? What makes a good King? Is the play Macbeth still relevant today?

The Comparative Study

The Comparative Study is probably the most challenging part of Leaving Cert English and you need to be well organised to cope with it well.  Know your three texts well but don’t obsess over every little detail like you would for the Single Text – it will actually just slow you down as you attempt to write an essay comparing three different texts. Know your modes of comparison well and practice exam questions for all of them.  For 2014 they are: Theme or Issue, Cultural Context and General Vision & Viewpoint.

Avoid summarising your texts; you should instead be constantly analysing and comparing them ie identifying similarities and differences between them.  Focus on key moments that exemplify the theme/viewpoint/aspect of cultural context. It’s a good idea to prepare some ‘multi-moments’ that serve all the modes of comparison and not just one.

There is no evidence to suggest that students do better on either the single essay type question or the two-part question.  Practice both types to give yourself more question options in the exam.

Poetry

The Unseen Poem can be an easy 20 marks in your pocket if you’re properly prepared for it. Approach it like a detective hunting for poetic techniques as well as possible meanings.  My students are well used to me barking questions at them as they read a poem for the first time: Does it rhyme? Does it appeal to the senses? What’s your favourite/the most striking image? Is there any figurative language (metaphors/similes) in it? Any alliteration/assonance/sibilance/personification etc.  If you think the meaning of the poem is going over your head focus on the poetic techniques you can spot and the impact they had on you in your answer.

Studied Poetry

In brief, I will advise preparing a minimum of 5 poets well, formulating your own personal reactions and opinions to each poet and memorising as much of the poetry as you can (within reason).

For me recording myself reading the poems onto a cassette tape (I sat my Leaving Cert a long, long time ago) and then listening to them over and over again made memorisation easy. Knowing the lines ‘off by heart’ gave me a sense of ownership over them and meant I didn’t have to waste valuable minutes in the exam trying to remember them.  ‘Rote learning’ gets a bad press in some quarters these days but, in my opinion, we don’t do half enough of it!  Know the poetry for yourself and have faith in your own opinions and instincts on it.


Check out Poetry Top Ten Tips for a more detailed look at Studied Poetry.  

Poetry Top Ten Tips

This article first appeared in the Irish Independent's Written Word supplement in March 2014.

1) Think!
The Leaving Cert English syllabus is strongly focused on getting students to think for themselves and to formulate their own opinions: “Students should be able to develop an awareness of their own responses, affective, imaginative, and intellectual, to aesthetic texts.” That means: don’t just learn a book of notes off by heart and think you’ll get an ‘A’ because you won’t. 
By all means read a range of criticism and analysis of your literary studies but ultimately you need to listen to your instincts and formulate your own opinions.  Do this well in advance of the exam day, as you won’t have much time for pondering your innermost feelings on Heaney in the exam hall.


2) Engage personally. 

Don’t write about the poet or poetry in the passive voice ie “Yeats is considered to be one of the twentieth century’s greatest poets…’ All Leaving Cert poetry questions are addressed directly to YOU and need to be answered by YOU, for example, ‘I found Yeats’ poetry about ageing to be incredibly powerful’ or ‘Heaney’s poem The Call reminded me of when I used to make phone calls home during my summer away…’ A personal example of how you connected with a poem will go a long way towards showing the examiner that you have engaged with the poetry on a personal level rather than simply learning off notes.

3) Talk the Talk

Familiarise yourself with the technical terms of poetry and don’t be afraid to use them e.g. stanza, metre, rhyme, metaphor, simile, onomatopoeia, alliteration, assonance, tone, imagery etc. There are glossaries of terms in a lot of the poetry textbooks or easily available online so there’s no excuse for pleading ignorance.

Only use technical terms, however, if they are relevant to the point you’re making or back up your argument in some way.  Trying to show off knowledge of terms out of context will make you look a little desperate.  A simple rule is to only talk about technique in the context of its effect on the reader.

4) Don’t be a Plath Predictor.
In 2012 every student in the country (or so it seemed) was completely certain that Sylvia Plath was going to be on the exam paper but when it came to that fateful day in June the poetic minx wasn’t there.  You simply cannot count on the one poet you want to come up being there on your exam paper. The State Examinations’ commission is deliberately trying to make the exam less predictable so counting on patterns or predictions is unreliable. 
The only surefire way of being prepared for June is by knowing five poets really well.  The manner of questioning has also become a lot more specific over the past few years so, even if that poet you love does come up, the question might not suit your knowledge of them.  Be a good Girl or Boy Scout and ‘Be Prepared’!
5) Don’t focus too much on Biography

Us teachers spend a lot of time filling students in on the context of a poem being studied; the life of the poet, the history of the era etc. When it comes to the exam question, however, you need to focus entirely on the poems and not on the exciting lives of the poets who wrote them.  It may fascinate us that Yeats knew some of the 1916 Rising leaders or that Emily Dickinson was a bit of a hermit but giving a heap of biographical detail unrelated to the question will earn you zero marks. Biography can help us understand the poems but the examiner is far more interested in what you made of the poetry than how many facts about Kinsella you’ve memorized.

6) Read a wide variety of poetry to prepare for the Unseen Poem

It’s only 20 marks but it might be the 20 marks that brings you up a grade so don’t neglect to prepare for the Unseen Poem.  Your textbook is likely to have an Unseen poetry section with a variety of poems that you can practice on.  If it doesn’t try exploring some of the following websites: poemhunter.compoetryoutloud.org and poetrybyheart.org.uk

Don’t worry if you don’t understand every single word of a poem.  It’s more important to practice describing how a poem makes you feel or what images stay with you after you finish reading it. 

7) Don’t Paraphrase the Poem
The Chief Examiner for English has criticized Leaving Cert English students for being prone to paraphrasing or summarizing both the unseen poem and studied poetry:  “While the majority of answers engaged with the text in a positive way, some merely paraphrased the poem or offered undeveloped responses.”  At Higher Level they expect deeper analysis, criticism and personal engagement. (Starting to see a pattern here?)


8) Read the Question

You could be a professor in Yeats’ studies at Yeats’ University, Yeats-ville and you could still fail the poetry question unless you read the question on the exam paper and then answer that question.  You are being assessed on how you answer that question so make that your focus.

9) Signpost your Answer

READ THE QUESTION! Did I say that already? Read it and then focus all your energy on answering that question and on showing the examiner that you are answering it by signposting clearly.   Don’t signpost it like a botharín in West Kerry with the sign pointing wonkily into a field.  Signpost your answer like you’re on a German Autobahn – clearly, logically and at regular intervals. Mention some aspect of the question in every, single paragraph and drill it in to that examiner that you are a poetry question answering machine.

10) Catch the Heart off Guard

My final message is to enjoy poetry – love it.  99% of you will never study poetry in a formal context again so this is it for you.  These are the poets that will stay with you for life.  The lines that you memorise will haunt you and at the most unexpected of moments you will find words from old poems helping you describe experiences you cannot verbalise yourself. Hazlitt said that ‘Poetry is all that is worth remembering in life’ and as the years roll by you’ll be shocked to realize that all that ‘practical’ stuff you learned in Maths and Biology will be long gone from your memory but lines from Yeats and Heaney will be etched on your heart forever.

Dickinson Dissected


This article first appeared in the Irish Independent's Written Word supplement in March 2014.


Soundings has a lot to answer for.  The classic textbook ‘enjoyed’ by generations of Irish Leaving Cert students is notorious for its roll call of dead white male poets and its utter lack of ethnic or gender diversity.  In this sea of testosterone Emily Dickinson was the sole representative of female poetry and the selection of poems by her in the book had a decidedly morbid bent. ‘Because I Could Not Stop for Death’ and ‘I Felt a Funeral in my Brain’ being two of the more popular ones.  As a result it is generally believed by most Irish people that she was a crackpot loner who was obsessed with death and that her poetry is ‘depressing’. I want to strongly emphasise that this attitude is widely off the mark and to say something like that in your exam will do a great disservice to both Emily Dickinson and yourself.  

Her 1800 strong collection of poems is dividedly evenly under the headings ‘Life, Love, Nature, Time and Eternity’ and fortunately the selection of poems on the current Leaving Cert course is a lot more representative of this variety of themes than was delivered in Soundings.  Dickinson, like many poets, tackled the essentials of the human condition, asking the big questions: How does one cope with fear of death? How does one face up to the imponderable eternity that may follow? How can one find any certainty in this world? What makes us happy? She said:  ‘My business is circumference’ meaning her goal was to understand the bigger picture of why we are here and what is important in life: ‘the essentials’.

The most immediately striking aspect of her poetry is, of course, her intransigently individual style. The reader is visually struck by her neat 4 line rhyming stanzas, unusual capitalisations and frequent use of dashes.  As one studies her work the purpose of her unique punctuation becomes apparent.  The capitals give emphasis to certain words, mostly nouns, on which she wishes to shine a spotlight.  Often they are concrete symbols for abstract ideas or emotional states.  In the poem ‘I heard a Fly Buzz’ the capitalised words include: ‘Stillness, Heaves, Storm, Eyes, Breaths,’ creating a hushed, tense atmosphere all by themselves. In ‘I Felt a Funeral in my Brain’ the treading ‘Mourners’ and ‘Service, like a Drum’ are symbols for the mental state she is seeking to describe.

The dashes contribute to the rhythm of the poems echoing the natural cadences of human speech.  An example from ‘I taste a liquor never brewed’:
‘Inebriate of Air – am I –
And Debauchee of Dew -
Read the lines aloud and you will hear the colloquial effect and a hint of Dickinson’s wry, dry humour. Ted Hughes commented that the dashes are ‘an integral part of her method and style, and cannot be translated to commas, semicolons and the rest without deadening the wonderfully naked voltage of the poems’.



It is also immediately striking how important the natural world is to Dickinson.  Her poems are populated by birds, bees, beetles, flies, snakes, butterflies and flowers.  She was clearly a keen observer of plant and animal life and records in minute detail their appearance and movement. From ‘A Bird Came down the Walk’:
‘He glanced with rapid eyes
That hurried all around –
They looked like frightened beads,   
I thought –
He stirred his Velvet head’ 

She also displays a sincere personal enjoyment of the natural world in ‘I could bring You Jewels’ and ‘I taste a liquor never brewed’.  In these poems the beauty of nature is more valuable to her than expensive jewels and more intoxicating than alcohol:
‘Inebriate of Air – am I –
And Debauchee of Dew –
Reeling – thro endless summer days –
From Inns of Molten Blue –

In ‘Hope is the thing with feathers’ she uses a bird to symbolise the abstract concept of hope capturing both its fragility and resilience.
‘And sweetest – in the Gale – is heard –
And sore must be the storm –
That could abash the little Bird
That kept so many warm –‘
Nature is the tool she reached for most often to help explore complex questions and emotions. In ‘The Soul has Bandaged moments’ she describes the polar opposite emotions of ecstasy and despair and uses the image of a bee to depict the ecstasy: ‘The soul has moments of Escape –/When bursting all the doors –/She dances like a Bomb.../ As do the Bee - delirious borne – /Long Dungeoned from his Rose -’ 

She was unafraid to also explore the darker aspects of the human condition including despair, fear and our attitude to death.  She knew both the high and low moments of life and was able to describe these emotions in extraordinarily concrete terms.  Her poetry is always, as Wordsworth put it: ‘felt in the blood and felt along the heart’. From the opening line of ‘I Felt a Funeral in my Brain’ we are brought inside the human mind and given an exploration of mental turmoil. All the elements of a sad funeral: ‘Mourners’, ‘a Service’ and ‘a Box’ are used as metaphors for internal sensations of anxiety and pressure:
                        ‘And when they all were seated,
                        A Service, like a Drum –
                        Kept beating – beating – till I thought
My Mind was going numb - ’
I don’t think there’s a Leaving Cert student out there who has not felt a pounding in their head at some point this year from over-study, (or under-study!), stress or anxiety. What she’s describing isn’t foreign or strange, it’s something we’ve all experienced. She’s just describing it in an unusual way.

The poem can also be read as a meditation on death and whether there is an after-life. She could be imagining remaining conscious after death and being aware of the funeral ritual happening around her. The final stanza of the poem ends abruptly and openly, perhaps leaving the reader to decide for themselves if there is an afterlife or not:
                        ‘And then a Plank in Reason, broke,
                        And I dropped down, and down –
                        And hit a World, at every plunge,
                        And Finished knowing – then – ’

The poem ‘I heard a Fly buzz – when I died’ is a less ambiguous imagining of the moment of death. Here Dickinson depicts a classic Victorian ‘death-bed scene’ with the family gathered in religious solemnity to mark the speaker’s passing:
                        ‘The Eyes around – had wrung them dry –
                        And Breaths were gathering firm
                        For that last Onset – when the King
                        Be witnessed – in the Room - ’
Instead of a moment of revelation or redemption, however, we get a moment of anti-climactic annoyance when ‘There interposed a Fly - /With Blue – uncertain stumbling Buzz - ’. The seriousness of the scene is completely spoiled by a bumbling Blue Bottle flying erratically ‘Between the light – and me - ’. The poem goes on to end, not with a ‘light at the end of the tunnel’ or a religious vision, but with nothingness: ‘And then the Windows failed – and then/ I could not see to see -’. The open-ended dash at the end leaves what comes after up to the reader’s imagination.  

In any analysis of Dickinson we have to acknowledge the privacy of her writing. She was not published to any real degree in her lifetime and very much wrote for herself rather than for others. As a result her poems are often somewhat elusive and open to interpretation – there are no interviews with Dickinson about the meaning of her poems on YouTube! At the core of her poetry, however, are the questions that man has asked himself since the beginning of time. While some of the language in her poems may now seem a little archaic to us, her themes remain bitingly relevant to this day. It is my firm belief that any Leaving Cert student can reach into her poems and find something there that speaks to their own personal experience. If nothing else ‘Hope’ (the thing with feathers) will be something you can cling to come 4th June!

The Psychology of Anthologies

Poetry requires time for consumption and digestion.  Not just physical clock time but mental 'head-space' time.  You can't read a poem while a part of your brain is thinking about what to cook for dinner or that you haven't been to the gym in three days.  You have to be focused.  If tweets are fast food designed for people on-the-go, poetry is foie gras and caviar; food to be savoured, relished and remembered.

It can be exceedingly difficult to find the time for it in the modern world with so many apps, websites and devices devoted to disrupting our thoughts and grabbing our focus as often as possible.  To get all that poetry has to offer you need to get away from the beeping gadgets, put up the 'do not disturb' sign and give it the respect it deserves.  Poetry is the one style of writing I don't fancy reading on my Kindle - it belongs on the printed page or to be spoken aloud by the human voice.  In short, it is sacred.

I am in general much more drawn to my mixed poetry anthologies than to a book by an individual poet.  I have collections by e.e. cummings, Emily Dickinson, Allen Ginsberg, Brendan Kennelly, Wendy Cope and many more whom I love but when I'm in the mood for poetry I tend to go back to the anthology where I read the poem that drew me to that poet originally rather than pick a book solely comprising their work.

Why is that? Are poems more appealing set among contrasting works?  Are anthologies better because an editor has gone to the trouble of picking the best poems and excluding the chaff?  Perhaps there are people out there who much prefer reading poems in their original collections 'as the poet's designed them' and scoff at anthologies.  I'd love to hear your thoughts on this!

I can only speak for myself and for me anthologies win almost every time so I thought I might give a brief introduction to a few of the poetry anthologies that have given me huge enjoyment in my life:



1) Staying Alive - real poems for unreal times. (2002) Edited by Neil Astley, published by Bloodaxe Books (Poetry With an Edge).

Neil Astley is a prolific anthologiser (I may have just invented that word) having put together a multitude of collections for Bloodaxe Books.  This book is one of a trilogy with companion pieces Being Alive (2004) and Being Human (2011) and is divided up under headings like 'Body and Soul', 'Roads and Journeys', 'Disappearing Acts' and, my favourite; 'Me, the Earth, the Universe'.

The blurb:
''Staying Alive' is an international anthology of 500 life-affirming poems fired by belief in the human and the spiritual at a time when much in the world feels unreal, inhuman and hollow. These are poems of great personal force connecting our aspirations with our humanity, helping us stay alive to the world and stay true to ourselves.'


2) 100 Poems by 100 poets - An Anthology. (1991) Selected by Harold Pinter, Geoffrey Godbert, Anthony Astbury, published by Grove Press.

The blurb:
'To pass the time on a long train ride from London to Cornwall, playwright Harold Pinter and his two companions, Geoffrey Godbert and Anthony Astbury, set up a challenge: Choose a hundred poems by a hundred poets – living poets excluded – to represent the finest poetry ever written in English. The three agreed to organize this collection unconventionally, alphabetically by author rather than chronologically. The resulting anthology is challenging, eclectic, very personal, and great fun. With its surprising juxtapositions and gargantuan range of voice and style, 100 Poems by 100 Poets brings old favorites into a new light and less well-known poems out of the shadows.'

The sticker from Charlie Byrne's bookshop on the back of this book is in punts so it's been in my possession at least ten years now.   I love it because they chose to include my favourite Shakespeare Sonnet (No. 29) which proves I have the same taste as Pinter.  Win.

3) Lifelines - New and Collected. (2006) Compiled by Dónal O'Connor, Caroline Shaw and Stephanie Veitch, intrduced and edited by Niall MacMonagle. published by Town House, Dublin.

The blurb:

"It is twenty-one years since the pupils of Wesley College Dublin first published their pamphlets, Lifelines - Letters from Famous People about their Favourite Poem, to help with famine relief in Ethiopia. Their stunningly simple idea resulted in three volumes of best-selling poetry anthologies.
Under the direction of their English teacher, Niall MacMonagle, the pupils of Wesley College now publish their final Lifelines. It is a hugely entertaining, eclectic collection, comprising entries from the famous of 2006 and selected responses from previous editions."

My favourite collection - without question. The fact that each poem has been selected as somebody's 'favourite' means that every one is gripping in some way. The inclusion of the letters explaining the choice is also a stroke of genius as it offers a helpful introduction to a previously unknown poem or can offer insights into a familiar one the reader may not have considered before. I have been dipping in and out of Lifelines for a few years now and continue to find hidden gems guarded by the blurry blue bunny (!)

Does anyone out there have an anthology they treasure and would like to share? Please let me know if so! I can offer more suggestions if people have all of these and want more ideas but I'd love to hear your ideas first.




In Praise of Rote Learning

Apparently learning poetry by heart is the new 'in' thing in educational theory.  They've even got a new government initiative in the UK driving the memorisation of poetry involving a nationwide competition for school students - see here: Poetry By Heart.



Anyone lucky (!) enough to have had me as a teacher over the past number of years will know that I have long extolled the benefits of poetry memorisation and since 2004 I have cajoled enormous numbers of students to successfully commit poetry to memory.  I always enjoy the look of astonished pride on the face of a reluctant poetry student as they complete the stanza or poem successfully in front of the class.

Poetry Ireland and the National Library have also been running the Poetry Aloud competition, a competition aiming to celebrate the spoken recitation of poetry, here in Ireland for a number of years now. Poems must be spoken from memory for Poetry Aloud so the while memorisation is not the focus of the competition it is necessary to compete.  By all accounts it's a terrific competition and if any Calasanctius students would like to compete next autumn do come to myself or one of the other English teachers to discuss it.

Memorising poetry isn't easy, as Stephen Moss of the Guardian demonstrates with his somewhat failed attempt to memorise William Blake's Auguries of Innocence -->

But the benefits of it for your brain are immense.  Rote learning gets a bashing in the media these days but I actually think we don't do enough of it in schools.  Memorisation improves focus, challenges and exercises your brain and has been proven to improve cognitive ability into old age.  There's a detailed run down of these benefits on awaken.com here: In Praise of Memorization.

In an era when we are generally externalising most of our knowledge (does anyone remember how we found answers to questions before Google?) and memory (do you actually know your best friend's phone number?) to devices and the internet we face a general 'dumbing down' of society unless we consciously fight to learn things by heart.

So what makes a particular poem good to memorise? I think a regular rhyming scheme and steady rhythm really help. The Poetry By Heart website has a very wide mix of stuff from Chaucer in 1380 right up to present day poets like Carol Ann Duffy and Patience Agbabi.  Some of it is very challenging (Sir Gawain and the Green Knight?!) but most of it is accessible to all readers and a few of the Leaving Cert  poets including Yeats, Boland, Longley, Mahon, Rich, Heaney and Larkin feature.

Since I started teaching I've compiled my own list of the best poems to gently encourage (read: force) students to memorise.  Here's a shortlist:

WB Yeats
  • The Lake Isle of Innisfree
  • The Stolen Child
  • He Wishes For the Cloths of Heaven

William Wordsworth
  • The Daffodils
  • To My Sister

Adrienne Rich
  • Aunt Jennifer's Tigers

Robert Frost
  • Nature's First Green is Gold
  • The Road Not Taken
  • Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening

Emily Dickinson
  • 'Hope' is the Thing with Feathers

Austin Clarke
  • The Planter's Daughter

Dylan Thomas
  • Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night


Now go learn one off by heart!

Numeracy in the English Classroom

I loved Maths at school and but for the limited choices available in 1st Arts in NUI, Galway I would have studied it on into university.  Surely becoming an English teacher has halted my love of numbers forever?  Not so (thankfully) as English literature, especially poetry, has much to do with numbers as my students are frequently baffled to discover.


Here Prof Roger Bowley argues that poetry and numbers are more closely linked than you might think:



Poetic metre or the rhythmic structure of a line of poetry fascinates me.  Why does the number of beats in the line contribute to the humour in a limerick? Or add to the emotion in a sonnet? Why does a rhyming couplet give us a feeling of completion at the end of a soliloquy or a sonnet? How did poets find a way to put music into words on a page?

Another word for poetic metre is 'prosody' which comes from the Greek for 'a song sung to music or pronunciation of a syllable' which demonstrates the two goals of poetic metre - to echo human speech and to capture music in words. Ultimately the 'rules' are not there to constrain poets but help a poet learn mastery over words, their rhythm and their music.  If you were learning to paint or to play an instrument would you not want to learn the exercises and techniques to help you learn rather than just figuring it all out on your own? It'd take ages!

If you'd like to learn more about poetic metre there are some great books out there:

The Ode Less Travelled by Stephen Fry

Blurb:

Stephen Fry believes that if you can speak and read English you can write poetry. But it is no fun if you don't know where to start or have been led to believe that Anything Goes.
Stephen, who has long written poems, and indeed has written long poems, for his own private pleasure, invites you to discover the incomparable delights of metre, rhyme and verse forms.
Whether you want to write a Petrarchan sonnet for your lover's birthday, an epithalamion for your sister's wedding or a villanelle excoriating the government's housing policy, The Ode Less Travelled will give you the tools and the confidence to do so.
Brimful of enjoyable exercises, witty insights and simple step-by-step advice, The Ode Less Travelled guides the reader towards mastery and confidence in the Mother of the Arts.


A Poetry Handbook by Mary Oliver 

Instead of a blurb I'll use this chance to reprint one of my favourite Mary Oliver Poems just because she's a fantastic poet and her brilliance at writing poetry serves to represent how wonderful her slim guide to writing poetry is also!


Wild Geese

You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.
Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
Meanwhile the world goes on.
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscapes, 
over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers.
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
are heading home again.
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely, 
the world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting  
over and over announcing your place 
in the family of things.