Notes from the Inkpot
Writing, teaching, creating - one ink-stained idea at a time.
How and Why to Teach Dulce et Decorum Est: Context, Meaning, and Classroom Approach
Dulce et Decorum Est is one of the most widely taught and frequently misunderstood poems of the First World War. This in-depth guide explores how and why to teach Wilfred Owen’s war poem through historical context, changing attitudes to war, and thoughtful classroom practice. From first encounters with the poem to assessment and common teaching pitfalls, this post offers a clear, purposeful approach to teaching Dulce et Decorum Est as more than an exam text — but as a powerful challenge to the language used to glorify war.
Ekphrastic Writing for the Classroom: Art, Photo & Science Prompts for English Teachers
Ekphrastic writing — responding to art with words — is one of the most powerful ways to build voice, imagination, and close observation in the English classroom. This ultimate guide pulls together classical paintings, surreal artworks, historical photographs, sculpture, science imagery, and AI visuals, with practical teaching ideas, student prompts, and cross-curricular extensions. Whether you’re planning a cover lesson, a full unit, or a gallery walk, this is the resource you’ll want bookmarked.
The Ultimate Guide to Ekphrasis (for Secondary Classrooms)
Bring art and writing together with this in-depth guide to ekphrasis — from Homer to high school. Includes examples of famous and classroom-ready poems, student-friendly activities for poetry and prose, and creative ideas for cross-curricular work with Art. Bookmarkable and ready to use.
100 Poetry Prompts for the Classroom: Teen-Friendly and Teacher-Tested
Explore 100 poetry writing prompts designed for teens, classrooms, and creative practice. This collection includes imagery-driven prompts, identity and memory poems, surreal writing ideas, social and political poetry, and form-based exercises to help students develop voice, imagery, and poetic language. Ideal for National Poetry Month, creative writing units, journaling, and daily poetry practice.
Poetry Writing Activities for the Classroom
Bring poetry to life with these 10 creative writing activities for middle and high school students. Low-prep, flexible, and classroom-tested — perfect for National Poetry Month or any time of year.
10 Best Christmas Poems to Teach (And How to Teach Them)
Christmas in the classroom is always a balancing act. You want something seasonal to capture the spirit of December, but it still needs the depth to justify lesson time. Poetry is the perfect answer. From Christina Rossetti’s wintry devotion to T. S. Eliot’s existential Nativity, these ten poems offer rich imagery, layered themes, and plenty of scope for creative writing.
10 Haunting Poems to Teach This Halloween (That Aren’t Just The Raven)
Halloween isn’t just for spooky short stories — poetry can be just as haunting. From Poe’s The Raven to eerie ballads like The Unquiet Grave, these poems bring atmosphere, symbolism, and Gothic chills into the classroom. Perfect for middle and high school, this list offers ten haunting poems that make October lessons both literary and seasonal.
10 Best WWI Poems to Teach (And How to Teach Them)
WWI poetry captures the shift from patriotic idealism to the brutal realities of the front line. These ten poems — from Owen’s haunting Dulce et Decorum Est to Rosenberg’s symbolic Break of Day in the Trenches — bring history, empathy, and powerful language into the classroom. Here’s why they’re worth teaching and how to make them resonate with your students.