Notes from the Inkpot

Writing, teaching, creating - one ink-stained idea at a time.

10 Whimsical Poetry Prompts for Teens & Adults: Imagination, Lightness, and Wonder

10 Whimsical Poetry Prompts for Teens & Adults: Imagination, Lightness, and Wonder

Whimsical poetry prompts invite writers to explore imagination, curiosity, and playful perspective through carefully crafted imagery and voice. Rather than relying on nonsense or randomness, whimsical poetry transforms ordinary moments into surprising possibilities — giving voice to objects, bending the rules of nature, or observing the world from unexpected angles. These 10 whimsical poetry prompts for teens and adults are designed for classrooms, creative writing practice, and independent writers. Each prompt focuses on craft techniques such as personification, imaginative metaphor, narrative voice, and gentle absurdity, helping writers develop imaginative poems that remain clear, thoughtful, and controlled.

Read More
10 Spring Poetry Prompts for Teens & Adults: Writing About Change, Light, and Renewal

10 Spring Poetry Prompts for Teens & Adults: Writing About Change, Light, and Renewal

Spring poetry is often associated with easy symbolism and tidy ideas of renewal, but the season itself is rarely that simple. In poetry, spring is a time of transition, exposure, and uneven change — moments where light returns gradually, growth feels uncertain, and what has been buried begins to surface. These spring poetry prompts for teens and adults invite writers to explore that complexity through imagery, atmosphere, and poetic craft rather than cliché. Designed for classroom use, writing groups, and independent practice, this collection of spring poetry writing prompts focuses on observation, restraint, and emergence. With suggested opening lines, craft focuses, and ekphrastic approaches, the prompts support thoughtful poetry writing that captures spring as it happens — unsettled, partial, and still in progress.

Read More
Pre-Reading Poetry Activities for Secondary English (Before Analysis Begins)
For Teachers, Teaching Literature, Poetry, Teaching Ideas Ink & Insights . For Teachers, Teaching Literature, Poetry, Teaching Ideas Ink & Insights .

Pre-Reading Poetry Activities for Secondary English (Before Analysis Begins)

Poetry often becomes difficult in classrooms not because the poems themselves are inaccessible, but because students are asked to analyse them before they have had time to encounter them as readers. When lessons begin with context, terminology, and line-by-line breakdowns, many students assume there is a correct interpretation they are meant to find — and that poetry is something to decode rather than experience. Pre-reading and pre-analysis poetry activities slow that process down. They give students space to hear a poem, react to it, and form instincts before analysis begins. By focusing on first impressions, emotional response, and pattern-spotting, these approaches help students build confidence and curiosity — making later close reading more meaningful, purposeful, and far less mechanical.

Read More
20 Conflict Poems to Teach: A Timeline from WW1 to Modern Warfare
For Teachers, Teaching Ideas, Poetry Ink & Insights . For Teachers, Teaching Ideas, Poetry Ink & Insights .

20 Conflict Poems to Teach: A Timeline from WW1 to Modern Warfare

Looking for conflict poems to teach? This teacher-friendly guide brings together 20 powerful poems about war and conflict, spanning World War One, Vietnam, modern warfare, and media-driven violence. Each poem includes a brief overview and practical classroom ideas, making it easy to dip in and out when planning lessons on ethics, trauma, protest, responsibility, and witnessing conflict from afar.

Read More
How and Why to Teach Dulce et Decorum Est: Context, Meaning, and Classroom Approach
For Teachers, Teaching Literature, Poetry Ink & Insights . For Teachers, Teaching Literature, Poetry Ink & Insights .

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.

Read More
The Distance Fragments: A Free Poetry Writing Experience for Blackout & Erasure Poetry
For Writers, For Teachers, Freebies, Creative Writing, Poetry Ink & Insights . For Writers, For Teachers, Freebies, Creative Writing, Poetry Ink & Insights .

The Distance Fragments: A Free Poetry Writing Experience for Blackout & Erasure Poetry

The Distance Fragments is a free poetry writing experience designed for slower, more reflective writing. Built around blackout poetry, erasure, images, and fragment-led prompts, the collection invites writers to work through removal rather than expansion — noticing what remains once language is pared back. This resource acts as a taster for a new series of fragment-led poetry prompt collections, offering open-ended materials that can be used independently, combined, or revisited over time. Ideal for writers, teachers, and classrooms exploring blackout poetry or contemplative creative writing, The Distance Fragments prioritises space, restraint, and return over speed or completion.

Read More
100 Poetry Prompts for the Classroom: Teen-Friendly and Teacher-Tested
For Teachers, Writing Prompts, For Writers, Genres, Poetry Ink & Insights . For Teachers, Writing Prompts, For Writers, Genres, Poetry Ink & Insights .

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.

Read More
10 Celestial Poetry Prompts for Teens & Adults: Exploring Stars, Silence, and Scale

10 Celestial Poetry Prompts for Teens & Adults: Exploring Stars, Silence, and Scale

Celestial poetry uses stars, light, and distance to explore perspective, time, and quiet emotion. Rather than focusing on scientific detail, celestial poems draw on observation and restraint — using the night sky to reflect on small human moments set against vast scale. These celestial poetry prompts for teens and adults invite writers to work with atmosphere, silence, and imagery rather than narrative or explanation. This collection of 10 Celestial Poetry Prompts includes guided writing ideas, suggested opening lines, craft techniques, and ekphrastic image prompts inspired by the night sky. Designed for classrooms, writing groups, and independent practice, the prompts support thoughtful, craft-focused poetry writing that encourages reflection, curiosity, and emotional precision.

Read More