I’ve found writing a haiku a day has helped me this winter. It has turned me away from confusion and towards hope and inspiration. It has gotten me to notice, to see the value in small, and to focus on what matters. Millions of thank yous to Mary Lee Hahn for her wisdom in starting the #haikuforhealing challenge.
Of course, I couldn’t help but think of how a classroom might benefit from haiku thinking; practices that mirror some haiku attributes.
Haikus are predictable structures.
As the new year starts, I want to re-establish a daily and weekly arc of predictability that allows each student to participate knowing what’s expected. Kids need predictable. No surprises. That empowers.
Haikus are small and focused.
It’s time to take the predictable structure to small, focused, predictable practice centered in meaningful texts (read aloud, articles of the week and podcasts) and designed to build and strengthen inferential skills necessary for meaning making.
Haikus are purposeful — they convey simple messages.
I want students to walk out of the classroom able to tackle troubles they encounter as they read. I want them to be able to write in ways that in fact, communicate what they want and believe.
small daily doses
purposeful predictable
slowly they add up
You have this wonderful way of taking every experience into your teaching life. Predictable structures are important to allowing for growth in life and in the classroom. Making small doses reminds me of Mary Poppins and her spoon full of sugar. Small doses do add up. Thanks for sharing your thinking today.
Yes, yes, yes. It’s the predictable structures, the rituals. And it’s the little things that add up. Glad the #haikuforhealing have helped you as much as they have helped me!
Thought of you and your classroom rituals as I wrote this post.
Love this post, love the idea–very truthful–that there’s such a thing as haiku thinking. Lovely to work with you all month, and Happy New Year!