Rainbow Poetry Exercise

By LaVon Bridges

This original poetry form is one that is simple enough to offer students with limited English skills the opportunity for creative expression. Rainbow poetry also helps teach the following important grammatical principles:

  • the definition of nouns
  • the definition of adjectives
  • how to use adjectives and nouns in English
  • how to use verbs in English

Students’ English vocabularies also increase as they search for new verbs for use in their poetry. Because these poems focus on colors, they are useful in teaching the vocabulary of color; they also assist in the teaching of concepts like prisms and the spectrum of a rainbow.

Introduction
Introduce the unit by discussing the rainbow and its color scheme: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. An easy way to remember the order is to think of it as the name Roy G. Biv. You can also use the book If You’re Afraid of the Dark, Remember the Night Rainbow, by Cooper Edens, before looking at the form and trying to write the poem. The book helps students realize that imagination is important, and that a poet or creative writer can look at life from a different viewpoint and help the reader look at life differently, too.

Writing Activity
Have students list the colors of the rainbow, in order, down the left side of a piece of paper. (Fewer colors can be used, depending on time constraints.) Then, with each color, have them write an object (noun) of something that is that color. Then, using the progressive verb tense (the "ing" form), have the student spend some time creatively describing what their noun is doing. A teaching model is listed below. Each color poem can stand alone, or they can be in a cycle, each relating to one another.

Have a conference with each student after they have finished their first draft, to go over grammar, spelling, and punctuation. Then, have the students write their final draft, drawing a rainbow and decorating the page as they wish.

Model
Rainbow Day

Red
     sunrise
               climbing up the darkness,
               kissing the stars.
Orange
     lilies
               swaying on the stalk,
               playing with the wind.
Yellow
     butterfly
               standing on a petal,
               sipping daisy nectar.
Green
     ivy
               creeping up the brick wall,
               looking for adventure.
Blue
     waves
               rolling toward the beach,
               bringing a mermaid.
Indigo
     parrot
               perching on a leafy branch,
               scolding everyone who passes.
Violet
     petunias
               blooming in a window box,
               perfuming the siesta hour.

Student Examples
The examples listed below are from Anchorage School District students enrolled in the Bilingual program. For each student, English is their second language.

Blue whalesBy Michael B. Poniente
blue
    whales
      jumping high in the sky
      flying over water


Green leaves illustrationBy Arsim Lena
green
      leaves
          falling from the sky
          floating in the water


Red bird illustrationBy T. Jay Mauga
Red
    bird
       flying in the air
       looking for its egg
blue
    feathers
       falling from the sky
       landing in the water
yellow
    bananas
       peeling from a monkey
       up in a tree
       dying to get eaten


By Stevenson Alo
yellow
      jello
         dancing on the table
          crying for marshmallow
red
     roses
         falling from the tree
         landing in the grass
blue
     monkey
         flying up in the tree
         looking for banana


Butterfly Exercise
Home Language Exercise
Culture and History Drama Exercise


Hoarfrost encrusted tree

Writing Workbook

Multiple Skill Levels

Elementary

Middle School

High School

Reading Workbook Index