
CC by-SA-3.0
Activity 1
Click this link for a good discussion entitled “How to Read a Poem” from Poets.org.
Provided by: Extended Learning Institute of Northern Virginia Community College. Located at: http://eli.nvcc.edu/. License: CC BY: Attribution
Activity 2

Public Domain CC0
Click this link to access “The Lake Isle of Innisfree” on the Poets.org website. Click the audio icon, and you will hear a very memorable and dramatic recitation of the poem by the author himself.
“The Lake Isle of Innisfree” is characterized as a lyric poem .
Click this link to read more about William Butler Yeats on the BMCC database Biography in Context.
OER source: https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poem/lake-isle-innisfree
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike

Public Domain
Activity 3
Click this link to access the poem “My Last Duchess”
on on the Commonlit website. This is written as a monologue and is an example of a dramatic poem.
Or click this link.
Activity 4
Click this link for my video lecture on “My Last Duchess” by Robert Browning.

Public domain
Activity 5
Click this link to access the poem “White Lies” by Natasha Tretheway. This is an example of a narrative poem.
Activity 6
Please read “We Real Cool” and “The Mother” by Gwendolyn Brooks.
Activity 7

Public Domain
Please click this link to access the Week 13 Discussion Board.
Click here for information about How Discussion Boards Work.
Click here for information about How Discussion Boards Are Graded.
NOTE: Final draft essay is due Sunday, April 23.
For directions and submission link info, see Activity 7 on the Week 12 page.
Please review student sample final drafts from the main menu if you are confused.