Learning to read, appreciate, and write poetry can be such a joyful experience in the classroom. But that last one is probably the trickiest. To help you out, we’ve created eight different worksheets covering common poetry types. We’ve provided background on the poetry types, examples, and space and directions for students to write their own. So if you’re getting ready for your poetry unit, you’re going to want this poetry worksheet bundle!
The “I Am” poem worksheet includes sentence starters to guide student writing. Remind them to start and end with the same sentence.
This one is also very guided, but it’s a great intro to poetry. We’ve included instructions below each line.
Students can use our template to write acrostic poems with their names, seasonal words, or vocabulary words from science or social studies for a nice cross-curricular activity.
Because haiku have syllable requirements, we’ve added those below each line to help students out. There’s room for them to write three haiku.
In addition to syllable requirements, limericks have a rhyme scheme, so we have line-by-line instructions on this one as well.
An ode is essentially a tribute to a person, thing, or event. Lots of space for this one!
Couplets end in a rhyming word, so we’ve created boxes at the end of each line as a reminder. We recommend having students select their rhyming words first.
For the blackout poem, we pulled a page from J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan. (New to blackout poetry? Read this article.)