The Art of Haiku
Grade Levels: 3 - 5
Overview
Students use
a web resource to learn about and write science-fiction poetry that uses a
haiku format.
Objective
To write a
specific form of poetry that draws on using figurative language, such as
similes and metaphors, and an awareness of syllables.
Materials
Steps
- Tell students they are going to use the World Wide Web to read and then write some poetry. Discuss haiku with students, reminding them that traditional haiku is a type of Japanese poetry that is three lines long. The first line is five syllables, the second, seven; the third five. The subject of haiku is usually nature; the poet usually expresses a strong feeling about something in nature.
- Then go to a website containing poems in the haiku and scifaiku format. Have students read the poems, and note how the authors used the haiku format to express strong feelings.
- Explain to students that scifaiku is a form of haiku in which the traditional subject, nature, has been replaced by science fiction. You may need to define science fiction as a type of fantastic story that makes use of real or imagined scientific devices or inventions, such as spacecraft. Point out that scifaiku is similar to haiku: They both are simple and direct, and they both use figurative language such as similes and metaphors, as well as sensory words.
- Provide the following example of scifaiku:
Once my grandmother
Find other examples on the Internet.
Told a tale from long ago
She saw a Martian! - Suggest that students think about words and ideas from the selections that they might wish to use in scifaiku of their own.
- Have your students write their own Haikus. Encourage creativity!
(Reminders: 1. Haiku usually has three lines and 17 syllables. 2. Remember to use sensory words that suggest sounds, smells, and visual images.)

