You Too Can Haiku
How can poetry and art tell the story of nature?
In this 3-5 lesson, students will write original haiku’s and paint landscape art. Students will explore the geography and culture of Japan. They will display their art on a scroll and design a class art gallery.
Lesson Content
Learning Objectives
Students will:
Identify the geographical location of Japan on a map.
Analyze and describe features of landscape art.
Identify the syllabic count in a haiku poem.
Describe the structure and form of a haiku.
Write an original haiku.
Create original landscape art.
Standards Alignment
Explore and invent art-making techniques and approaches.
Experiment and develop skills in multiple art-making techniques and approaches through practice.
Demonstrate openness in trying new ideas, materials, methods, and approaches in making works of art and design.
Identify and explain how and where different cultures record and illustrate stories and history of life through art.
Compare and contrast purposes of art museums, art galleries, and other venues, as well as the types of personal experiences they provide.
Cite evidence about how an exhibition in a museum or other venue presents ideas and provides information about a specific concept or topic.
Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, descriptive details, and clear event sequences.
With guidance and support from peers and adults, develop and strengthen writing as needed by planning, revising, and editing.
Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, descriptive details, and clear event sequences.
With guidance and support from peers and adults, develop and strengthen writing as needed by planning, revising, and editing.
Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, descriptive details, and clear event sequences.
With guidance and support from peers and adults, develop and strengthen writing as needed by planning, revising, editing, rewriting, or trying a new approach.
Recommended Student Materials
Editable Documents: Before sharing these resources with students, you must first save them to your Google account by opening them, and selecting “Make a copy” from the File menu. Check out Sharing Tips or Instructional Benefits when implementing Google Docs and Google Slides with students.
Websites
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Teacher Background
Teachers should be familiar with haiku poetry. Review the article, Poetry and Puppets: Learning English, to support oral language and vocabulary building with ELL students. The Collection: Japan may also offer a deeper understanding of Japanese art and culture.
Student Prerequisites
Students should be familiar with types of poetry and poetry elements.
Accessibility Notes
Provide assistive technologies during research and the art-making process. Allow sufficient space for movement around the room for the gallery exercise.
Engage
Ask students if they remember a time when they had a very important idea to express but just couldn't find the words. If possible, cite an example of your own.
Ask students if they remember having to say something really important but could only use very few words. Explain to students that the Japanese form haiku expresses significant ideas using very few words. Tell them that a traditional haiku has just three brief lines. Ask students: Can a whole idea be expressed using only 3 lines or 17 syllables? What about seven syllables? Or even five?
Have students practice condensing their ideas by relaying the following experiences in less than 17 syllables.Propose the following scenarios to students and have them share their ideas:
- You are very angry at a younger sibling for spilling milk all over your homework that is due today.
- You would like to thank a role model for supporting and mentoring you.
- You are overcome with joy as you learn that your best friend gifted you a season pass to the local amusement park.
Now have students share their condensed ideas with the class. Discuss the challenges of squeezing their thoughts into such a small space. Discuss how they met the challenge. Discuss what they discovered about their ability to express grand ideas in small spaces.
Build
Introduce or review the following vocabulary.
island: landmass that is surrounded by water
archipelago: a group of many islands in a large body of water
hemisphere: half of the terrestrial globe
latitude: the angular distance between an imaginary line around a heavenly body parallel to its equator and the equator itself
longitude: the angular distance between a point on any meridian and the prime meridian in Greenwich, England
Share and display a . If possible, use a large class map as a visual aid at the front of the room. Explain to students that Japan is made up of four large islands and thousands of smaller islands. Tell students this is an example of an archipelago. Ask students: What bodies of water surround Japan? (North Pacific Ocean and the Sea of Japan.) In what hemisphere is it located? (Northern hemisphere.) What are Japan’s latitude and longitude? (Latitude 36.2048° N and Longitude 38.2529° E)
Show students two landscape paintings of Mt. Penglai in Japan: ​â¶Ä‹ and . Have students describe some of the characteristics of Japanese landscape painting. Share the resource, , from the National Museum of Asian Art. Allow time for students to explore the landscape art collection.
Ask students to share some examples of landscape paintings that they may have seen. Some students may remember paintings they have seen at museums, in books, or their own homes. Share other examples of landscape art from around the world, for example:
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Select a landscape painting to compare with one of the two ​â¶Ä‹Mt. Penglai paintings. Discuss the commonalities among the artists and paintings. Ask students to compare how this style of painting compares to landscapes from around the world. They should be as specific as possible when they are describing pieces of art, noting, for example, whether the Japanese paintings set a particular mood (give them a particular feeling).
Explain to students that a unique form of poetry called haiku was created in Japan around 1200 A.D. Many of the types of landscapes seen in Japanese paintings are referred to in traditional haiku.
Apply
Tell students that a haiku has a special poetic rhythm: it consists of seventeen syllables written in three lines. The first line contains five syllables, the second line contains seven syllables, and the third line contains five syllables. Tell students that haiku is usually written about something in nature and that animals are frequent subjects of haiku. A well-written haiku should also include a kigo. A kigo is a word that hints at a particular season of the year without actually naming the season. For example, a reference to squirrels might indicate that a haiku is set in autumn.
Share an example of haiku with the class. Post the chart paper with the example haiku. First, read it aloud to students. Then have them clap out and count the syllables of each line.
The least of breezes Blows and the dry sky is filled With the voice of pines -Issa
As a class, analyze the haiku using the . Read two or three more examples of haiku to the class with the resource, . Display the haiku on chart paper or an interactive board so students can read along as you read aloud. Have students clap and count the syllables in each. Continue with the same discussion questions outlined above.
Explain to students that they will now write an original haiku. Review the again with students. Have a brief brainstorming session to generate a list of possible nature topics or research landscapes around the world.
Allow time for students to write an original haiku. You may wish to play traditional Japanese music or nature sounds to inspire students as they write.Have peers edit their haiku’s using the .
Tell students they are going to create landscape art to go with their poems. Have students plan a sketch of their landscape, keeping in mind that they will be using watercolors for their final painting.
Have students practice using the watercolors. Tell students watercolors are thinner than tempera paint. There are two methods for applying color to the paper. They can wet the paper with plain water first and then add the color. Or, they can apply the water and color at the same time. The students might want to experiment with this process for a few minutes before applying the watercolor to their final scroll.
Reflect
Have students create a landscape watercolor painting onto a scroll. Using the watercolors, students should paint a scene in the style of the Japanese paintings they have viewed and discussed. (Note: Paintings should use muted colors, broad brushstrokes, etc.)
After the painting drys, have students neatly copy their haiku onto the scroll. Students can lightly copy the poem onto the scroll with a pencil, then trace over the pencil lines with a permanent black marker. Note: Be sure to use permanent markers; a water-soluble marker could smear.
When the scrolls are ready, students should glue thin dowels to the top and bottom of the paper so that they can be rolled up like a scroll. Dowels should extend beyond the edges of the paper on each side. The thin cord can be tied to either side of the dowel at the top to create a hanger for the poem.
Display the completed scrolls in the classroom. Engage students in a “Gallery Walk” to view the landscape art and haiku poems. Assess your student’s poems with the resource.
In this 3-5 lesson, students will illustrate self-portraits to identify their senses. They will take a virtual field trip to the ocean to explore a sensory experience. Students will write a haiku poem about the ocean, bringing science and creative writing together as one.
In this K-2 lesson, students will explore elements of art and different artists' techniques to create various styles of paintings. Students will interpret art and describe styles by using key vocabulary terms when discussing paintings.
Help English-learning students build language and communication skills through poetry and puppetry
Literary Arts
Language Studies
Puppetry
English Language Learners
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