Spring Poetry Writing (Without Overcomplicating It)
Teaching poetry in ways that fit real classrooms

Painted children’s hands representing creativity, expression, and teaching poetry through writing in elementary classrooms
Teaching poetry in ways that fit real classrooms helps students see poetry as a form of expression, not a performance.

Spring is a lot.

Testing season is rolling in.
The calendar is packed.
Everyone’s tired.

And somehow, poetry still shows up on ELA tests—whether we feel “ready” for it or not.

If poetry hasn’t been a major focus all year, that can feel stressful. But here’s something worth remembering: you don’t need to overhaul your writing block to make spring poetry meaningful.

You’re already doing good things.

Poetry can simply layer into the classroom community you’re already building.

Here are a few manageable, classroom-friendly ways to bring it in—without overthinking it.

Elementary students working together at a table, sharing ideas and building enthusiasm for poetry
Poetry is better together—conversation and collaboration help ideas grow.

One place to start: lean into what spring already gives you

Spring does a lot of the work for us.

Instead of inventing topics, you might invite students to notice what’s already changing around them:

  • new leaves or buds on trees
  • the first dandelions popping up
  • bees returning to flowers
  • warmer air or longer days

This can look different in every classroom:

  • a quick walk outside
  • a few quiet minutes at the window
  • a short shared conversation before writing

Then… writing.

When students experience spring first, poetry feels natural. They already have something to say. Vocabulary comes from real life—not a list on the board.

Another way to keep it simple: choose a few poem types and stay there

Rather than trying to “do all the poems,” it can help to settle on just a handful and let students grow comfortable with them.

Five poem types that tend to work especially well in spring:

  • Haiku – short and perfect for observations
  • Cinquain – great for describing and playing with words
  • Tanka – similar to a haiku, but with room for feelings
  • Limerick – rhythmic, playful, and engaging
  • Diamanté – ideal for showing change (winter → spring, seed → flower)

You might revisit the same forms more than once. When the structure feels familiar, students spend less time worrying about rules and more time choosing better words.

Elementary student reading a poem and visualizing ideas, showing imagination and mental imagery in poetry
When students picture a poem first, the words come more naturally.

Something that makes a big difference: visualizing poetry

If you’ve ever noticed how kids connect to song lyrics, you already understand this.

Before writing, you might:

  • read or listen to a poem together
  • pause to picture what’s happening
  • sketch what students see in their minds
  • talk about how everyone pictured something a little differently

Those conversations are gold.

Students realize there isn’t one “right” image. They start trusting their thinking. Poetry feels less intimidating and more personal.

A low-pressure way to build excitement: sharing without grading marathons

If you’re feeling grading fatigue (who isn’t), poetry can actually help—especially when students help each other.

One possible approach:

  • Students write several poems over time
  • They choose the one they’re proudest of
  • Partners or small groups give feedback
  • Students revise before anything is “finished”

Kids are very capable of evaluating writing when they’ve seen examples and had time to talk about quality. They’re opinionated anyway—why not use that energy to help each other grow?

This kind of sharing builds:

  • confidence
  • ownership
  • real conversations about writing

And it takes a lot of pressure off you.

If you want a celebration (without chaos)

Some teachers like to wrap up spring poetry with:

  • a Spring Poetry Café
  • a simple class “contest” by poem type
  • sharing poems during conferences
  • adding poems to writing portfolios

Nothing fancy required. Just a chance for students to say, “This is my best work.”

Poetry becomes something they’re proud of—not just another assignment.

Two elementary students reading together outdoors, showing poetry as approachable and connected to real experiences
Poetry doesn’t have to feel intimidating when students encounter it in familiar, meaningful ways.

Why poetry still matters right now

Poetry always shows up on ELA tests.

When students have written poems themselves—read them, talked about them, visualized them—those test questions feel familiar instead of scary.

Ideally, poetry lives in the classroom all year. But if spring is where you’re starting, that’s okay.

What matters is that students leave knowing poetry is something they can do.

You’re already building a classroom community.
Poetry can simply strengthen it.

Take what fits. Leave what doesn’t.
You know your students best.

Want some ready-to-use support?

If you’re looking for ways to bring poetry in without creating everything from scratch, here are a few options teachers often find helpful:

A fun way to introduce poetry:
Poetry Scavenger Hunt lets students explore poems on their own. Teachers gather poetry books, students can browse poetry websites, and kids search for lines, patterns, and favorites. It’s a low-pressure way to build curiosity and excitement before writing even begins.

For spring poetry writing:
The Spring Poetry Writing resource includes the five poem forms mentioned above, along with a visualizing poetry lesson using a classic poem—so students learn how to see, feel, and talk about poetry before they write.

For introducing classic poetry in upper elementary:
Read & Write About Poetry is designed to help students read, discuss, write about, and even recite six classic poems—making classic poetry feel approachable instead of intimidating.

If you want poetry to feel natural all year long:
The Poetry Bundle includes Fall, Winter, Spring, and Summer Poetry Writing resources, plus the Poetry Scavenger Hunt and Read & Write About Poetry—making it easy for students to read, write, and develop a love of poetry across the entire school year.