Showing posts with label Group poem by the the kids in Room2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Group poem by the the kids in Room2. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

BECAUSE By the Kids in Room 2















Because 
By the Kids in Room 2

Clothes are for wearing.
Rubber bands are for hair.
Shoes are for feet.
Sharks are for scaring.
But I heard they are actually scared of humans.
They only eat people because they think they’re seals.
I only eat sharks
because 
they’re salty

and sweet.

Saturday, March 21, 2015

THE BROKEN ONE By the Kids in Room 2













The Broken One
By the Kids in Room 2

A pigeon.
One wing bent 
the wrong way,
dragging across the concrete.
The other wing
flapping,
its neck feathers
shimmering.
The one with beady,
red
eyes
waddles over to the 
broken one
and
their beaks smooch
under

the bench.

Monday, January 12, 2015

What Is Missing by the Kids in Room 2


























What Is Missing

The "No Kids Allowed" sign,
the eight ball,
light from a lamp,
a ticking clock,
a meteorite.
The boy's shadow,
his smile,
his glasses
because he stepped on them,
his body,
the pool cue,
probably a bar,
a glass of Tsing Tao
an altar to a great-great-great,
the other shoe,
a few arms,
the line
in a rainbow
where red meets orange,
noise

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

PRESENT PERFECT By the Kids in Room 2


After being out sick for a day, I returned to Room 2 to find this poem along with a note from the sub about how incorrigible the class was. I think the note and the poem cancel each other out in some cosmic way. Before my absence I'd been struggling to teach the present perfect tense, assuming I had failed. But apparently not. The poem is written in the present perfect progressive, a variation on the tense I never mentioned. Nonetheless,  the class figured out it was "perfect" for this particular poem. The kids tell me each student contributed a line or two, and Alex takes credit for spearheading and editing the project. - Robyn


We’ve been lost.
We’ve been gay.
We’ve been controlled.
We’ve been bored.
Nothin’ to DO.
We’ve been cheated.
We’ve been crazy.
We’ve been growing armpit hair.
We’ve been eaten.
We’ve been fat.
We’ve been killing.
We’ve been dead.
We’ve been killed.
We’ve been starving.
We’ve been hungry.
We’ve been hurt.
We’ve been abused.
We’ve been controlling.
We’ve been in misery.
We’ve been miserable.
We’ve been paralyzed.
We’ve been staring.
We’ve been bullied.
We’ve been littering our lives.
We’ve been sacrificing them.
We’ve
been
nothing.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

NOON AT KFC By the kids in Room 2















It is noon at KFC. 
Oil sizzles,
Bones crack.
If I am not eating,
why am I here?
When I order
I will try joy
and button my sweater.
Right now I am leaving. 

Friday, September 23, 2011

POLK STREET MANIFESTO By the Kids in Room 2

This piece was inspired by (a G-rated version of) Michelle Tea's "Pigeon Manifesto." It was a group effort, written shout-out-style with Robyn transcribing at the laptop. Collage by Alex, Liyi & Wendy.





I live on Polk Street. It was once a stream but now it is cement. It’s named after President Polk, who started postage stamps and died of cholera, a thing that sounds like college and collar and cocktail but is actually a disease that can kill you with pooing. If you walk south from our school, you’ll find KFC at the corner of Eddy Street where Serenity’s mom and Judith’s mom both work. People in holey clothes fidget near the soda machines, chattering about money or drugs. Once Jessica’s dad had a coupon for ten free biscuits. When we ate them we felt like kings! Keep walking and a block before you hit Market Street, City Hall will light up the sky and the library will feed you books and the park will squeal when you swing on its tire. If you ask Polk Street, “Why do you let people sleep on your shoulders, and why do you let jackhammers drill through your skin, and why do let buses roll down your spine?” Polk Street will tell you, “It feels like a massage.”