Poem of the Week
Every week
a poem will be published on the OSL Training Poetry Blog
and comments will be invited. There is no ‘final’ answer - the purpose is to encourage visitors to think,
to analyse and to discuss. Essential
skills!
Read the Poems here!
Free Poetry e-Book!Compliments of OSL Training
"Using Poetry to teach Business
Studies" Download now! 
Why study poetry?
‘The
answer is that we are alive. To be alive is to be full of emotion and passion
and opinions and beauty and anger and hope and dreams and fears. To be human is
to have the desire to express one's self in any form we can find.
Poems are expressions of what is inside each of us. Each poem is written for a
very good reason, whether it be because someone close to us has died and we are
suffering or because we have just had our first child and bringing them into
the world was an event we will never forget. We all have experiences that can be
translated into poems.’
http://www.angelfire.com/journal2/englishresource/poem.html
"In addition to the psychological and intellectual reward poetry can
provide, reading it can have practical value. Studying poetry can be a source
of enhancing reading and analytical skills. Understanding poetry demands that
one pay close attention to text, especially to diction, grammar and syntax;
this process naturally strengthens reading comprehension skills."
-
‘Why teach
Poetry’ by Carol Clark
Download
the whole article here: http://www.epsbooks.com/downloads/articles/Why_Teach_Poetry.pdf
However:
“The teaching of poetry whether in
university, college or high school is the single most damaging force to the
creation and appreciation of the genre. One of the underlining advantages of
studying poetry at a university or college is that if you fail to create any poetry
of merit you can always fall back on teaching it. This ensures that the damage
will be perpetuated onto the next generation.”
Source:
The Danforth review
Download
the full article hereL http://www.danforthreview.com/features/essays/henihan.htm
A positive view
“Shakespeare, Mozart, Churchill are examples of poets who will continue to
inspire. Anything which touches the soul and makes us less than indifferent is
poetry. That's why it exists and why I love studying it. Although rather than
"study", I might say experience.
Teaching poetry is a bit more difficult because students sometimes equate
studying poetry with being tortured! Once we get over that little hump, it's
inspiring. One of the best times I've had teaching poetry was when we
culminated with a coffee house and students brought their poetry, either some
else's or their own and performed it. Also, chalking limericks on the school
sidewalks was good.
Anything that bursts the dam, that opens kids up to how to handle emotion, that
teaches them how to flow with life, that shows them how to circumnavigate the
weltering world, is studying poetry. And I love being there when it happens.
Teachers are so lucky, especially English teachers.”
-
poster on
Guardian talkboards
But what
about poetry and other subjects?
“Business and Poetry at first glance
have little in common. Most people consider business as representative of the
rational side of our society. Business is involved with profit and concrete
ways of achieving it. Poetry represents the creative, more abstract side of the
world. It deals with ideas and emotions, not the bottom line. Yet, on closer
inspection, many areas of overlap actually exist.”
http://www.smallbusinessnotes.com/operating/leadership/businesspoetry.html
Poetry and Science?
Is there a link between science and poetry? Find out on our
Poetry and Science page.