Pearl Jam in the classroom

I teach 9th grade English. I'm excited about today because we're covering poetry - specifically, figurative language in poetry (simile & metaphor).
The students have to answer open ended response questions about poems that use figurative language to express a thought or feeling. The simile poem is some generic love poem from the text book that the other English teachers chose, but the metaphor poem I chose for them is Wishlist. Almost every line is a metaphor so it works perfectly. I emailed the poem to the English department and got responses like "I love this poem" and "this is a great poem! Who is the author?"
They'll have to analyze Wishlist and provide an answer to a question (The author uses metaphors to show _______ ?) then support their answer with text evidence and an analysis.
The students have to answer open ended response questions about poems that use figurative language to express a thought or feeling. The simile poem is some generic love poem from the text book that the other English teachers chose, but the metaphor poem I chose for them is Wishlist. Almost every line is a metaphor so it works perfectly. I emailed the poem to the English department and got responses like "I love this poem" and "this is a great poem! Who is the author?"
They'll have to analyze Wishlist and provide an answer to a question (The author uses metaphors to show _______ ?) then support their answer with text evidence and an analysis.
"Most men lead lives of quiet desperation and go to the grave with the song still in them." - Thoreau
No time to be void, or save up on life, you've got to spend it all
No time to be void, or save up on life, you've got to spend it all
Post edited by Unknown User on
0
Comments
I remember writing in an email to a friend years ago with the few first lines to Present Tense. He had no idea they were lyrics to a PJ song and responded with "that's an amazing poem. who's the author?".
I wrote back with a response only of "Mr Ed Vedder" and he responded with "hmmm, never heard of that poet, I will have to look up what else he has written"
'you need a helmet'
His response was this, word for word
'I don't need a helmet, I've got a hard head'
so I taught him some of whipping, so when ever I say to him 'what does eddie vedder say?' He responds with the first verse.
Sydney 14/02/2003
Sydney 07/11/2006
Sydney 18/11/2006
Sydney 22/11/2009
EV Sydney 18/03/2011
EV Sydney 19/03/2011
EV Sydney 20/03/2011
Melbourne 24/01/2014
Sydney 26/01/2014
EV Sydney 13/02/2014
I start my Poetry Unit each year with Wishlist... like you, because of the metaphors. It really is great stuff.
I start of poetry each year by asking the class if they like poetry peotry or not... usually at least half the class says they hate poetry - most of the boys especially. So then I give them the lyrics on paper, and I DON'T reveal that it's a song... just tell them it's one of my favorite poems. We read it, discuss it, etc; and the kids really get into it.
Then I tell them that i was fortunate to hear a live peotry reading of the poem, and that maybe they'll appreciate the poem even more if they hear it read by the actual poet rather than their boring English teacher. So then I show them a live performance of it, they realize it's a song, and it's a pretty cool moment. Then I ask them again, if they like poetry? And now that they realize songs are a form of poetry, usually all of the hands in class go up.
I usually hit a few other songs throughout the unit... Long Road works well... Daughter...
I also do an extra credit assignment, where they can pick their favorite song... print the lyrics on one side of the paper, and then come up with 5 poetry questions about the song on the reverse side. They basically make their own worksheet. Then, in class, we play the song, follow the lyrics, and answer the questions. They love it. And it gives me a chance to stay current with what they're listening to - although some years, that can be painful, for me.
Bottom line, mixing music in my poetry unit has been gold.
EVx11
I teaching public speaking and use Jeremy for the commemorative unit when we look at language. I'm pretty sure college kids aren't as fun as grade school, though.
New Mexico Pearl Jam Fans (New Mexico, USA) on Facebook!
1996: Ft Lauderdale
1998: Birmingham
2000: Charlotte, Tampa
2003: Tampa, Atlanta, Phoenix
2004: Kissimmee
2008: West Palm Beach, Bonnaroo, Columbia
2010: MSG2
2012: Music Midtown
2014: Memphis
2018: Wrigley 1, Fenway 1
2022: Nashville
2023: Ft. Worth II
2024: Baltimore
Upcoming: 2025 Hollywood, FL Night 2
2010: 5/20 NY, 5/21 NY ... 2011: 6/21 EV NY, 9/3 WI, 9/4 WI ... 2012: 9/2 PA, 9/22 GA ... 2013: 10/18 NY, 10/19 NY, 10/21 PA, 10/22 PA, 10/27 MD
2015: 9/23 NY, 9/26 NY ... 2016: 4/28 PA, 4/29 PA, 5/1 NY, 5/2 NY, 6/11 TN, 8/7 MA, 11/4 TOTD PA, 11/5 TOTD PA ... 2018: 8/10 WA
2022: 9/14 NJ ... 2024: 5/28 WA, 9/7 PA, 9/9 PA ---- http://imgur.com/a/nk0s7
Same here! Wish I had an English teacher that taught PJ!
So awesome you're including PJ in your curriculum. I really do think students could get a whole lot out of PJ and especially in a poetry unit find it interesting to explore Ed's lyrics.
Though I haven't ever had a teacher use or mention PJ, I have found ways to mention them somehow in work for most of my classes past and present! So far this year they have made an appearance in a paper for my music class (duh!), a sociology paper, a lit response, and a speech for my communications class
~not a dude~
2010: MSGx2
2012: Made In America
2013: Pittsburgh, Brooklynx2, Hartford, Baltimore
2014: Leeds, Milton Keynes, Detroit
2015: Global Citizen Festival
2016: Phillyx2, MSGx2, Fenwayx2
2018: Barcelona, Wrigleyx2
I teach high school psychology and just used Guaranteed as part of our discussion on adolescence (searching for identity). They had to, then, bring in their own song that represented a stage of adolescence in someway. Got mostly Lil Wayne, but I think as least a few kids appreciated my choice.
On a side note, I did use Black earlier in the year for another writing project. To my surprise, most seemed very indifferent to it.
No time to be void, or save up on life, you've got to spend it all