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A resource guide for middle school teachers

Dr. Maya Angelou

Dream in Color
Imagine a world where diversity is celebrated. A world where people of all complexions and cultures express themselves freely. If you imagine it, then you Dream In Color. Target, in partnership with the Poetry Foundation, Furious Flower Poetry Center at James Madison University and Dr. Maya Angelou, invites you to celebrate Black History Month through the rich legacy of African-American poetry. Discover the work of poets past and present, whose voices move us all to continue to dream. As part of our 2007 Black History Month celebration, Target is proud to provide a toolkit to inspire children of all ages to Dream In Color. Students will discover the works of important African-American poets, classroom activities designed to encourage them to develop their own poetic voices, discussion guides, bibliographies and links to engaging online poetry resources. Dream In Color is just one of the ways that Target supports diversity and makes a real difference in the lives of children through the arts and education.

To the Teacher:
The exercises in each unit are meant to serve as guidelines to excite students about poetry. The exercises are not sequenced, so you may use as many or as few as you like, and in any order. You may want to do one exercise per class period, or you may want to stretch an exercise over a few days. The exercises should be fun for both you and the students, so just jump in and enjoy the results.

1. Family and Friends . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 2. Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 3. Dreams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12

1. Family and Friends


My Grandmother Is Waiting for Me to Come Home
My Grandmother is waiting for me to come home. We live with walnuts and apples in a one-room kitchenette above The Some Day Liquor Gardens. My Grandmother sits in a red rocking chair waiting for me to open the door with my key. She is Black and glossy like coal.
Discussion Questions Background Family is one of the most often-recurring themes in all genres of African-American literature. The trauma of enslavement, followed by the routine separation of the members of slave families, created a focus on displacement and replacement that shouts and murmurs through black poetry and prose. The family is also often depicted as a space of discovery, nurture and support. Writing about family explores personal history, develops a sense of community, and establishes identity. In Brooks My Grandmother is Waiting for Me to Come Home, the most important yet understated idea is that the grandmother is home, she is there, and she lingers. Even though the kitchenette is small and lacking in fancy material possessions, the grandmother is substantial and warmly welcoming.

We eat walnuts and apples, drink root beer in cups that are broken, above The Some Day Liquor Gardens. I love my Grandmother. She is wonderful to behold with the glossy of her coal-colored skin. She is warm wide and long. She laughs and she Lingers.
Gwendolyn Brooks
From In Montgomery and Other Poems by Gwendolyn Brooks. Third World Press, Chicago. Copyright 1967 by Gwendolyn Brooks. Reprinted by consent of Brooks Permissions.

1. Imagery Read the poem aloud to the class, but do not hand out copies yet. Read the poem again. Ask the class to respond to these questions either verbally or in a drawing: Can you describe the room where the grandmother is waiting? What does the grandmother look like? Where is the grandmother sitting? What do the grandmother and the grandchild eat? Where does the grandmother live? Hand out copies of the poem. What did Gwendolyn Brooks describe in the poem that you forgot to write down (or draw)? Why do you think you remembered what you did?
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Guide the students toward a discussion of imagery. Imagery uses vibrant language to create a mental sensation. To help them understand that they remember the things they wrote down because the images stuck with them, ask some of the following questions: How many of the things you remember are connected to your senses? Describe the grandmothers chair. In your mind did you see the red rocking chair? Describe what the grandmother and grandchild ate. In your mind could you taste apples or walnuts? Explain that Brooks uses the poetic device of imagery to help us to see the home and the people she describes in the poem. Her imagery helps the poem to stay with us after we have finished reading it. 2. Speaker Read My Grandmother Is Waiting for Me to Come Home. Ask the students the following or similar questions: Who is the speaker in the poem? (Or, who is telling the story?) How old do you think the speaker is? Why do you think this? Be sure that the students are using information from the poem to answer this question. Do you think the speaker is a boy or a girl? Does it matter? Are the grandmother and child wealthy? Why do you think this? Be sure that the class uses information from the poem to answer this question. When your mom or dad asks you to see something from their point of view, what do they mean? How is your point of view as a middle schooler different from your point of view at age six? If you were to write a poem from a first graders perspective, what could you do to help your reader recognize that youre writing from a little kids point of view?

When Gwendolyn Brooks wrote the poem, she was already an adult and a famous writer. She uses her imagination to write a poem from a childs point of view. She uses simple imagery and repetition to show her readers how much the child loves the grandmother. 3. Free Verse, Repetition, Sound This poem is written in free verse. For a discussion of poetic form, ask the students the following: What is rhyme? Can you give me an example of rhyme? Does this poem rhyme? Are the lines in this poem all the same length? Ask the students to count the syllables in each line of the poem. Do the lines of the poem have the same number of syllables? Do the syllables per line have a pattern such as 11, 7, 7, 11? Or 8, 6, 8, 6? Point out that the poem does have a specific form; this style of poetry is called free verse. In a free verse poem, the poet can make a line as long or as short as she wants. Writing in free verse does not mean that the poet does not care about style. A poet chooses her words and the style of her poems very carefully. While some poems call for exciting verbs (as in Komunyakaas Slam, Dunk, & Hook in the Middle School SPORTS curriculum), Brooks chooses to use the verb is four times in the poem. The use of simple verbs and repetition (She is is used three times) in the poem helps us to hear the voice of a child describing her grandmother. Brooks also pays close attention to the way words sound when they are in a line together. She uses consonance, assonance and alliteration to create repetitions of sound within the poem. Read the poem to the class, emphasizing the sounds of the
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consonants and vowels. Ask the students to: Underline all of the places they hear consonance. Circle the places they hear assonance. Draw a box around instances of alliteration. If the students need reinforcement, write a word on the blackboard and ask them to: Come up with other words that begin with the same sound and that make a sentence. Students find it easier to alliterate with consonants: PURPLE pigeons parade proudly through Paris. COZY cats curl up in Connies kitchen. Consonance is a little harder for most children to verbalize, since it usually comes at the end of words. Give simple examples such as: Janet went in the tent and ate. Darius rides the bus. Explain that assonance is usually similar vowel sounds within a line. Use the following as an example: Come on in, were in the den. Ask students to underline or otherwise mark the examples of alliteration, assonance or consonance in the following: The red, red robin comes bob, bob, bobbin along. What a wonderful bird is the pelican, Its beak can hold more than its belly can. Explain to the class that these devices make the words stand out and help you to remember the poem after you read it.

Activities 1. Hand out the Margaret Walker poem Lineage, and have the students highlight the images in the poem. Lineage My grandmothers were strong. They followed plows and bent to toil. They moved through fields sowing seed. They touched earth and grain grew. They were full of sturdiness and singing. My grandmothers were strong. My grandmothers are full of memories Smelling of soap and onions and wet clay With veins rolling roughly over quick hands They have many clean words to say. My grandmothers were strong. Why am I not as they? Margaret Walker
From This Is My Century by Margaret Walker. Copyright 1989 by Margaret Walker. Reprinted by permission of The University of Georgia Press.

2. Have the students share examples of an adult who is special to them. After a few ideas have been shared to start the creative juices: Ask each child to select an adult who is special to write a poem about. This may be an aunt, uncle, teacher, or coach. Have the class sit quietly for three to five minutes and imagine they are in the adults house. Then ask these questions, giving the students ample time to write:

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What images did you see? Write those images down. Can you add details? How does the house smell? What can you hear when you are in the house? Is it warm? Cold? Humid? How does being in the house make you feel? Ask the students to write 10 sentences that begin with: My [special adult] is ___________________________. Have them take their favorite details from their lists and compile them into a free-verse poem. Optional Activity As a homework assignment, ask the class to read Fifth Grade Autobiography by Rita Dove or Poem [2] by Langston Hughes. Ask each class member to write a poem about someone close to him or her who is no longer here. The person does not have to be deceased it might be a parent in the military or an older sibling in college. The poem can be simple and short, or detailed and full of imagery. Suggest that the students use consonance, assonance or alliteration in the poem.

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More poems about Family and Friends


Fifth Grade Autobiography I was four in this photograph fishing with my grandparents at a lake in Michigan. My brother squats in poison ivy. His Davy Crockett cap sits squared on his head so the raccoon tail flounces down the back of his sailor suit. My grandfather sits to the far right in a folding chair, and I know his left hand is on the tobacco in his pants pocket because I used to wrap it for him every Christmas. Grandmothers hips bulge from the brush, shes leaning into the ice chest, sun through the trees printing her dress with soft luminous paws. I am staring jealously at my brother; the day before he rode his first horse, alone. I was strapped in a basket behind my grandfather. He smelled of lemons. Hes died I want to shout Im A TAN! but I remember his hands. Rita Dove
from Grace Notes. Copyright 1989 by Rita Dove. Used by permission of the author and W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. This selection may not be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher.

Poem [2] (to F.S.) I loved my friend. He went away from me. Theres nothing more to say. The poem ends, Soft as it began, I loved my friend. Langston Hughes
From Collected Poems. Copyright 1994 by The Estate of Langston Hughes. Used by permission of Harold Ober Associates Incorporated.

Puzzlement I, partly Nigerian. I, partly Puerto Rican. I have a Nigerian father, a Puerto Rican mother. I am packed in a skin that is tan. I, too, have a heart on fire. I, too, want to be Proud. I, too, want to be Something and Proud.

Gwendolyn Brooks
From In Montgomery and Other Poems by Gwendolyn Brooks. Third World Press, Chicago. Copyright 1967 by Gwendolyn Brooks. Reprinted by consent of Brooks Permissions.

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2. Sports
Slam, Dunk, & Hook
Fast breaks. Lay ups. With Mercurys Insignia on our sneakers, We outmaneuvered to footwork Of bad angels. Nothing but a hot Swish of strings like silk Ten feet out. In the roundhouse Labyrinth our bodies Created, we could almost Last forever, poised in midair Like storybook sea monsters. A high note hung there A long second. Off The rim. Wed corkscrew Up & dunk balls that exploded The skullcap of hope & good Intention. Lanky, all hands & feet . . . sprung rhythm. We were metaphysical when girls Cheered on the sidelines. Tangled up in a falling, Muscles were a bright motor Double-flashing to the metal hoop Nailed to our oak. When Sonny Boys mama died He played nonstop all day, so hard Our backboard splintered. Glistening with sweat, We rolled the ball off Our fingertips. Trouble Was there slapping a blackjack Against an open palm. Dribble, drive to the inside, & glide like a sparrow hawk. Lay ups. Fast breaks. We had moves we didnt know We had. Our bodies spun On swivels of bone & faith, Through a lyric slipknot Of joy, & we knew we were Beautiful & dangerous.
Yusef Komunyakaa
from Pleasure Dome: New and Collected Poems 2001 by Yusef Komunyakaa and reprinted by permission of Wesleyan University Press.

Background In 1924, Howard Universitys newspaper included an editorial that stated: Athletics is the universal language. By and through it we hope to foster a better and more fraternal spirit between the races in America and so to destroy prejudices; to learn and to be taught; to facilitate a universal brotherhood. Many of the advances made in the progress toward racial integration in the United States occurred in the sports arena. In the early 1900s, George Poage, John Baxter Doc Taylor, and DeHart Hubbard became famous for winning gold medals in the Olympic games. In 1908, Jack Johnson was the first AfricanAmerican to become Heavyweight Boxing Champion. The color barrier in Major League Baseball broke when Jackie
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Robinson was signed to the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. During times of intense racial prejudice, AfricanAmericans were able to compete in sports and defy mistaken notions of white superiority. Athletic teams in some ways paved the way for the desegregation of schools and neighborhoods. Today, many of our countrys most skilled athletes are those of African descent. The neighborhood hoops have become both a place to hone ones skills on the basketball court and a place for social congregation. Yusef Komunyakaa creates the poem Slam, Dunk, & Hook to come alive with the rhythms and movements of schoolyard basketball. The schoolyard game was sometimes a rite of passage, sometimes a therapy session, and just as often a test of pride and identity. Discussion Questions Listen to a recording of Komunyakaa reading Slam, Dunk, & Hook, or read the poem aloud to the class. 1. Word Choice There are some big words in this poem, but the class should be able to understand those words in the context of the poem. Pass out copies of the poem and discuss the following with the class: Ask the students what the poem is about. Ask them to circle the word basketball every time it occurs in the poem. When they dont find the word basketball in the poem, then ask: If basketball isnt in the poem, why do you think the poem is about basketball? The students might say that the poem uses words such as slam dunk and metal hoop. List all of the basketball words the children identify on the blackboard.

Discuss how poets use descriptive words related to the subject instead of boring words that identify the subject. Ask the class: Is the poem only about basketball? What else do you think the poem is about? If the students need help, ask them to describe the players: Are the players boys or girls? Are they short or tall? Do they seem almost like they are more than human? In the middle of the poem, the speaker tells us about Sonny Boy. You can almost miss this part of the poem if you read it too quickly, but this reveals that the players love of basketball runs deeper than just a game. What does basketball mean to Sonny Boy? 2. Simile and Metaphor Discuss simile and metaphor in the poem. Metaphor says one thing is another thing. Simile uses like or as to equate two things. Give the children examples of metaphor and simile: Metaphor All the worlds a stage. Lifes a beach! Shes a ball of fire! Our team was a fighting machine! Simile Hes as bold as brass. Shes as bright as a penny. That teacher is as hard as nails! I wish it would rain- its as dry as a bone. Her skin was like sandpaper.

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Can you identify similes and metaphors in the poem? How many of you play basketball? Have you been to a game? Picture the game in your head. How are basketball players like bad angels? Sea monsters? Sparrow hawks? 3. Performance If you listened to Yusef Komunyakaa read the poem, ask the class the following questions. If the teacher read the poem, insert your name for Komunyakaa where appropriate. With what tone does Komunyakaa read the poem? Does he make the game sound intense? How does Komunyakaa arrange the poem on the page? What does Komunyakaa do to make the intensity of the words visible on the page? Ask students to memorize one of the other poems included in this curriculum, paying close attention to tone. Have them perform their poems for one another. 4. Word Choice Point out that many of Komunyakaas verbs are not words we use in our everyday conversations. How often do you use the word corkscrew to describe an action? What other unusual verbs does Komunyakaa use? What picture comes to your mind when someone says: He pirouetted? She slammed? They raged? He spiked?

Activities: 1. Performance Have the class stand in a circle. You can hold onto the poem and assign a phrase or sentence to each student, going around the circle. The first student will be Fast breaks. The person to her left will be Lay ups, then the next two to the left can be With Mercurys insignia on our sneakers, and We outmaneuvered to footwork. (You can determine the length of their phrases based on what you think they can handle.) As you assign a phrase or sentence to each student, make him come up with a motion to go with it. Have the entire class repeat the phrase with the motion each time a new one is assigned. Then, with each additional phrase and motion, begin again with the Lay ups and, as a class, repeat the phrase and motion of each student thereafter. By the end of the poem, the entire class should be able to say the poem together with the motions. If your class is particularly ambitious, break the circle up and try to act out the poem as though it is a basketball game without losing track of whose line comes next! 2. Enjambment and Poetic Sentence Structure After completing this activity, have the students return to their desks and look at the written poem. Ask if they notice anything about how their individual phrases are written in the poem. One of the things they should notice is that a thought often begins on one line, breaks off and continues on another. This is an example of enjambment.

As a poet, Komunyakaa looks for words that best describe actions, and he can turn nouns into verbs to achieve that effect.

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Ask the students whether Komunyakaa writes in complete sentences. Have them give examples. Explain that in a poem a sentence can be short, long, or incomplete. The poet bends the rules of grammar to help the poem capture the feeling he wants to convey. Komunyakaas short sentences help us to sense the quickness of each motion in the poem. The poet forces our eyes to follow swiftly down the page, just as the players move quickly on the court. Optional Activity For homework, have students listen to a sportscaster on the radio or on TV and listen for the kinds of verbs a sportscaster uses to help the audience see what is happening. Write poems using these verbs to describe a game. Practice playing with line breaks and enjambment to create a poem that reflects the action of the game.

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More poems about Sports


Harlem Hopscotch One foot down, then hop! Its hot. Good things for the ones thats got. Another jump, now to the left. Everybody for hisself. In the air, now both feet down. Since you black, dont stick around. Food is gone, the rent is due, Curse and cry and then jump two. All the people out of work, Hold for three, then twist and jerk. Cross the line, they count you out. Thats what hoppings all about. Both feet flat, the game is done. They think I lost. I think I won. Maya Angelou
From The Complete Collected Poems of Maya Angelou. Random House, New York. Copyright 1994 by Maya Angelou. Used by permission of the author.

Makin Jump Shots He waltzes into the lane cross the free-throw line, fakes a drive, pivots, floats from the asphalt turf in an arc of black light, and sinks two into the chains. One on one he fakes down the main, passes into the free lane and hits the chains. A sniff in the fallen air he stuffs it through the chains riding high: traveling someone calls and he laughs, stepping to a silent beat, gliding as he sinks two into the chains. Michael S. Harper
From Images of Kin by Michael S. Harper. University of Illinois Press. Copyright 1977 by Michael S. Harper. Used by permission of the author.

old tennis player Refuses To refuse the racket, to mutter No to the net. He leans to life, conspires to give and get Other serving yet. Gwendolyn Brooks
From Blacks by Gwendolyn Brooks. Third World Press, Chicago. Copyright 1987 by Gwendolyn Brooks. Reprinted by consent of Brooks Permissions.

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Once the Dream Begins I wish the bell saved you. Float like a butterfly & sting like a bee.

dance. Whoever said men hit harder when women are around, is right. Word for word,

Too bad you didnt learn to disappear before a left jab. Fighting your way out of a clench, you counter-punched & bicycled but it was already too late gray weather had started shoving the sun into a corner. He didnt mess up my face. But he was an iron hammer against stone, as you bobbed & weaved through hooks. Now we strain to hear you. Once the dream begins to erase itself, can the dissolve be stopped? No more card tricks for the TV cameras, Ali. Please come back to us sharp-tongued & quick-footed, spinning out of the blurred

we beat the love out of each other. Yusef Komunyakaa


From Pleasure Dome: New and Collected Poems 2001 by Yusef Komunyakaa and reprinted by permission of Wesleyan University Press.

Zuri at Bat Dear Danitra, At the softball game last week, smart-mouth J.T. snickered loud and said, What makes you think a puny girl like you can help us win? Exactly where you been? I asked him, stepping in. When the pitch came, I slammed the ball so far, it ripped through the clouds and headed for a star. I strutted round the bases, took my own sweet time. My new friend, Nina, laughed and bet J.T. he couldnt hit a ball as far as me. He cant, and thats a fact. Nikki Grimes
First appeared in Danitra Brown Leaves Town, published by HarperCollins. Copyright 2002 by Nikki Grimes. Used by permission of Curtis Brown, Ltd.

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3. Dreams
Dream Boogie
Good morning, daddy! Aint you heard The boogie-woogie rumble Of a dream deferred? Listen closely: Youll hear their feet Beating out and beating out a

Harlem
What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun? Or fester like a sore And then run? Does it stink like rotten meat? Or crust and sugar over Like a syrupy sweet? Maybe it just sags like a heavy load.

You think Its a happy beat?


Listen to it closely: Aint you heard something underneath like a

Or does it explode?
Langston Hughes
From Collected Poems. Copyright 1994 by The Estate of Langston Hughes. Used by permission of Harold Ober Associates Incorporated.

What did I say?


Sure, Im happy! Take it away!

Background From the very beginning, African-American poets have been creators and critics of social values as they envisioned a world of justice and equality. As they reflected their values in the context of the American Dream, they created a body of poetry that grew out of their folk roots. Langston Hughes Dream Boogie shows the importance of music, improvisation, and inventive style. With it he creates a poem which is inspired by boogie-woogie rhythms that accompanied the popular dance crazes of the period. The music encouraged African-Americans to dance and dream of brighter days even when their realities were the blues.

Hey, pop! Re-bop! Mop! Y-e-a-h!


Langston Hughes
From Collected Poems. Copyright 1994 by The Estate of Langston Hughes. Used by permission of Harold Ober Associates Incorporated

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Discussion Questions 1. Introduce Langston Hughes to the class using the information provided in the biography section. Give the students Langston Hughes Harlem to read for homework the night before the class discussion. Have them answer the following questions for homework: 1. What dream do you think Langston Hughes is referring to in his poem? 2. What does it mean to defer something? 3. What do you think Langston Hughes is talking about when he refers to a dream deferred? 4. Hughes uses very descriptive language to ask questions about what might happen to a dream deferred. First is an example of Hughes language. Underneath, tell what you think he is saying: Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun? __________________________________ Or crust and sugar over Like a syrupy sweet? __________________________________ Maybe it just sags like a heavy load. __________________________________

Explain to the students that Harlem is an important poem in African-American poetry, not only because of its excellence as a poem, but because many poets and writers have made allusions to the poem in other works. For example, Lorraine Hansberry titled the famous play A Raisin in the Sun from the third line of the poem. 2. Rhythm In class, distribute copies of Dream Boogie to the class. Ask them to read it silently. Divide the class in half, and ask one-half to read the non-italics aloud and the other to read the italics aloud. If the class naturally falls into the boogie rhythm, call that to their attention and continue with the following discussion. If the class does not read in boogie rhythm, explain that you are going to suggest a different rhythm. Read the poem aloud with the syncopated boogie rhythm. Ask the class to read aloud in halves again, and continue the discussion below: What is rhythm? If you are asked to dance to the rhythm or if someone says I have rhythm, what does this mean? Rhythm can be quite complex, but basically it is the repetition of a beat or sound in a predictable pattern. An example of rhythm that many students will recognize comes from jump rope rhymes, such as: Cinderella, dressed in yella, Went upstairs to kiss a fella, Made a mistake, kissed a snake, How many doctors will it take?

Or does it explode? __________________________________


In the next class period, spend 10 or 15 minutes talking about Harlem by Langston Hughes. Ask the students: What kinds of things does Hughes suggest might happen to a dream that is deferred? What is the theme of the poem?

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What kind of rhythm does Dream Boogie have? Is it a heavy rhythm? Is it a snappy rhythm? Does the title of the poem give you any clue as to the type of rhythm? The answer, of course, is boogie woogie. 3. Riffing Explain that musicians use a technique called riffing when they take part of a song and bring it into another song. (Riffing entered the musical lexicon in the 1920s as jazz musicians improvised and brought musical elements from existing songs into their compositions and improvisations. The jazz great Charlie Parker, for example, used some of the chord progressions in his music that George Gershwin had composed a half generation earlier.) In music, riffing can also be a melodic phrase that you hear repeatedly in a song often passed from one soloist to the next. If you have any aspiring jazz musicians in your class, they might be able to provide some examples of riffing in music they have played. Rappers are famous for riffing on the work of previous artists when they take a phrase of music or a lyric from an older piece and use that as the background for a new theme. Ask the class if they can think of examples. Look carefully at Harlem and Dream Boogie. Ask the students: Can you tell where Dream Boogie riffs on Harlem? Does Dream Boogie sound more hopeful than Harlem? Why or why not? The poem riffs on the question What happens to a dream deferred? Hughes takes the phrase dream deferred and moves it from a serious poem into an upbeat, jazzy poem. It is catchy, like a song. Why do you think Hughes chose to write Dream Boogie in a musical context? The boogie-woogie style was pervasive in the 1920s and well recognized in popular culture. Connecting

words to a musical style gives poetry an accessibility that words alone may not have. If a listener were to hear Hughes or a jazz band read Dream Boogie, do you think they would remember the words? Activities 1. Rhythm and Scat Read Dream Boogie or Boogie 1 a.m. aloud. Ask the students to put the poems face down on their desks; then ask them to recite either one of the poems in their entirety probably no one can. Ask them if they can scat the musical rhythm of the poem using non-words, such as follows for Dream Boogie: Be bop a re bop (Good morning, daddy!) Bop a dop (Aint you heard) a boogie woogie doo wop (The boogie-woogie rumble) If students are not comfortable with using nonsense or scat words, ask them to hum (not as effective for boogie) or to use da dunk. (The point is that the words to the poem may not stay completely with the reader, but the musical element makes the poem memorable.)

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2. Rap Borrow any books of Langston Hughes poetry that are available in your schools library. We recommend Montage of a Dream Deferred or Selected Poems of Langston Hughes. Youll find a gold mine of musical poems in these books. Hand out copies of Easy Boogie (page 17). Talk about the elements in the rap that come from both poems, and how Litwin fits them together in one musical piece. Flip through the Hughes books that you have on hand. Which other poems could fit into the rap? Have your students choose a poem from this curriculum and create a riff collage a rap made up of pieces of poems by Langston Hughes.

Optional Activity Alternately, you could provide the students with one stanza from Motto and ask them to write a rap that uses this stanza as the refrain.

Motto I play it cool And dig all jive. Thats the reason I stay alive. My motto, As I live and learn, is:

Dig And Be Dug In Return.


Langston Hughes
From Collected Poems. Copyright 1994 by The Estate of Langston Hughes. Used by permission of Harold Ober Associates Incorporated.

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More poems about Dreams


Theme for English B The instructor said,

So will my page be colored that I write? Being me, it will not be white. But it will be a part of you, instructor. You are white yet a part of me, as I am a part of you. Thats American. Sometimes perhaps you dont want to be a part of me. Nor do I often want to be a part of you. But we are, thats true! As I learn from you, I guess you learn from me although youre older and white and somewhat more free. This is my page for English B. Langston Hughes
From Collected Poems. Copyright 1994 by The Estate of Langston Hughes. Used by permission of Harold Ober Associates Incorporated.

Go home and write a page tonight. And let that page come out of you Then, it will be true.
I wonder if its that simple? I am twenty-two, colored, born in Winston-Salem. I went to school there, then Durham, then here to this college on the hill above Harlem. I am the only colored student in my class. The steps from the hill lead down into Harlem, through a park, then I cross St. Nicholas, Eighth Avenue, Seventh, and I come to the Y, the Harlem Branch Y, where I take the elevator up to my room, sit down, and write this page: Its not easy to know what is true for you or me at twenty-two, my age. But I guess Im what I feel and see and hear, Harlem, I hear you: hear you, hear me we two you, me, talk on this page. (I hear New York, too.) Me who? Well, I like to eat, sleep, drink, and be in love. I like to work, read, learn, and understand life. I like a pipe for a Christmas present, or records Bessie, bop, or Bach. I guess being colored doesnt make me not like the same things other folks like who are other races.

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Boogie: 1 a.m. Good evening, daddy! I know youve heard The boogie-woogie rumble Of a dream deferred Trilling the treble And twining the bass Into midnight ruffles Of cat-gut lace. Langston Hughes
From Collected Poems. Copyright 1994 by The Estate of Langston Hughes. Used by permission of Harold Ober Associates Incorporated.

I, Too I, too, sing America. I am the darker brother. They send me to eat in the kitchen When company comes, But I laugh, And eat well, And grow strong. Tomorrow, Ill be at the table When company comes. Nobodyll dare Say to me, Eat in the kitchen, Then. Besides,

Easy Boogie Down in the bass That steady beat Walking walking walking Like marching feet. Down in the bass That easy roll, Rolling like I like it In my soul. Riffs, smears, breaks. Hey, Lawdy, Mama! Do you hear what I said? Easy like I rock it In my bed! Langston Hughes
From Collected Poems. Copyright 1994 by The Estate of Langston Hughes. Used by permission of Harold Ober Associates Incorporated.

Theyll see how beautiful I am And be ashamed I, too, am America. Langston Hughes
From Collected Poems. Copyright 1994 by The Estate of Langston Hughes. Used by permission of Harold Ober Associates Incorporated.

Dream in Color Middle School 17

listen children listen children keep this in the place you have for keeping always keep it all ways we have never hated black listen we have been ashamed hopeless but always all ways we loved us we have always loved each other children pass it on Lucille Clifton
From Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir 1969-1980 by Lucille Clifton. BOA Editions, Ltd. Copyright 1987 by Lucille Clifton. Used by permission of the author.

tired

mad

all ways

Dream in Color Middle School 18

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