
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 Read Aloud: Listen for Expression to hear how a poem comes alive.
Why it matters
Reading poems aloud helps students notice the sound, mood, and rhythm of the words. Read Aloud: Pause at Line Breaks 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. Read Aloud: Match Voice to Meaning 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.