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PROFESSIONAL COMMENTARY

If you've ever drawn a heart for the word "love," you've written a rebus. Rebus, writing which substitutes images for words in the text, is a well-known technique used by authors to write books for young readers able to identify only a limited number of words, so why not use this same rebus technique to teach writing? This lesson uses rebus poetry as a strategy to reinforce students understanding of rhyming words. Students demonstrate their creative writing skills by crafting their own rebus poems. (author/ncl)

OHIO STANDARDS
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English Language Arts Standards
Phonemic Awareness, Word Recognition and Fluency Standard
Writing Applications Standard
NATIONAL STANDARDS
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Standards for the English Language Arts
Range of materials and purposes for reading
Reading strategies, language use, and conventions
Write, speak, and visually represent to create text
Purposes for using spoken, written, and visual language
RESOURCE TYPE
Instructional Resource
PRACTICE LEVEL
Promising Practice
STANDARDS ALIGNMENT
Grades K–2
TOPICS
English Language Arts --
Writing;
Writing Applications;
Literature;
Poetry;
KEYWORDS
rebus;
poetry;
creative writing;
rhyming words
Publisher: Read Write Think.org
Author: Devon Hamner