
Lesson
Read Poems Aloud
Students practice reading poems with expression, pauses, and a voice that matches the meaning.
Read Poems Aloud
What students learn
Students learn that poems sound best when readers use expression, pauses, and a voice that fits the meaning. Start with to hear how a poem comes alive.
Why it matters
Reading poems aloud helps students notice the sound, mood, and rhythm of the words. shows that line breaks and punctuation help guide the voice.
Learn the idea
A poem does not need to sound flat. Readers can slow down, pause, and change their tone to match the poem's feeling. helps students practice reading with the right mood.
Try it
Choose a short poem and read it two ways: once in a flat voice and once with expression. Ask which version sounds more like poetry and why.
Parent guide
Model the reading first, then let the child echo one line at a time. If the child rushes, remind them to pause at line breaks. If they sound monotone, ask them to read the line as if they are sharing the feeling with a friend.