Macclesfield Express

Help unleash your child’s inner poet

CHILDREN’S LAUREATE JOSEPH COELHO TELLS LISA SALMON HOW PLAYING WITH WORDS THROUGH POETRY CAN GET CHILDREN ‘HOOKED ON READING’

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MANY parents and caregivers read to their young children at bedtime – but it tends to be a story they share with them, rather than poetry.

However, the Children’s Laureate, Joseph Coelho is urging grown-ups to not only read poetry to their kids, but get them writing it too.

“I would absolutely encourage parents to try and read poetry to children at bedtime,” says Joseph, a poet, playwright and children’s book author who was elected Waterstone­s Children’s Laureate in 2022.

“Especially rhythmic poems, they can help lull you into sleep, and give you lovely images to drift off to, to dream about. So I would highly recommend it.”

The benefits for children can be huge, he says, and often centre around increased understand­ing of people’s feelings.

“Through reading poetry, children are able to discover the thoughts and feelings of others, helping to increase empathy,” Joseph explains.

“Through writing poetry children can have the experience of their words, their thoughts and feelings, having power, being valid and listened to.”

Another big plus for parents reading poetry to their kids is that poems are often quite short, says Joseph.

“You can dip in and out, you can read one poem, you can read 10 poems – there’s something really attractive about that, the ability to go as far as you want without feeling like you need to finish a whole chapter or complete the book.

“I think poems are really satisfying in that regard.”

It’s not just reading poetry that Joseph is championin­g – he thinks children should try writing it too.

He’s teamed up with Govia Thameslink Railway (GTR) to launch the Poetry in Motion competitio­n, where children aged five to 13 years can write a short poem about somewhere they love to visit by train or think others should visit by train. Joseph is one of the judges.

The writer, who grew up in a single-parent family on a southwest London council estate, started creating poetry himself in sixth form after the Jamaican ‘dub poet’ Jean ‘Binta’ Breeze came to his school and “silenced my entire class” when she read one of her poems to them.

“I thought ‘I wanna do that’,” he recalls.

Joseph did so in style, going on to write more than 35 children’s books, including his first poetry collection, Werewolf Club Rules, and the Overheard in a Tower Block poems.

He eventually received the ultimate children’s writing accolade of being named Children’s Laureate, a post which celebrates outstandin­g achievemen­t in children’s writing and illustrati­on. But is Joseph’s talent and enthusiasm for the world of rhyme really likely to be shared by the average child?

“People often think kids won’t be into poetry, but in my experience, the key is to have the opportunit­y to find a poem and a poet they connect with,” he points out.

Verse novels are a fantastic way in to poetry for kids, he explains.

“Verse novels, by their nature, don’t take as long to read, and they can be great for a child who’s a reluctant reader,” Joseph says. “They’re great at grabbing the reader and hurtling them through a story.

“So I think poetry is a very easy sell to kids when it’s presented in the right way, and they get a chance to discover something that speaks to them.”

Joseph says some par- ents may be reading a form of poetry to their kids without even realising it, and explains: “You could argue that many picture books really are poems, especially the rhyming ones – picture books and poetry are very close cousins. And we’ve had far more poetry anthologie­s coming out, beautiful illustrate­d collection­s of gorgeous poems by lots of different poets.

“Books like that are really opening up the way to give parents the resources to read poems to young people at bedtime, or whenever they have a spare moment.”

But what about the kids themselves – how do they usually respond

to reading or writing poetry?

“I find they get really excited about having a go,” says Joseph, who explains his work has always revolved around introducin­g children to poetry and giving them the chance to see themselves as poets and to write.

“I feel that’s really important, because if you allow children the opportunit­y to write, they can see themselves as writers, and then words and language is not purely something we’re expecting them to consume, it’s something we’re inviting them into, and that makes them far more engaged, especially reluctant readers.

“I think that’s a far better place to get children hooked on reading, a place where they can see that words are theirs as well. It’s a party they’re invited to as opposed to something they have to take on.”

Joseph adds: “Poetry does a wonderful job – it translates the soul, it takes those things that we find it difficult to speak about, it sums up our feelings and our emotions, or takes a moment in time and condenses it into a beautiful, easily understand­able nugget.

“Often young people don’t get the opportunit­y to just see themselves as a poet, and to discover the joy of playing with words.

“That’s what I love about poetry, I love the joy of playing with words.”

■ The Poetry in Motion competitio­n closes on May 10. Winners will have their poems displayed on trains and at stations across the GTR network and receive complement­ary return rail travel for themselves and four family members. To enter, go to tinyurl.com/ms94tf76

The key is to have the opportunit­y to find a poem and a poet they connect with Joseph Coelho on getting kids into poetry

 ?? ?? The write stuff: Putting pen to paper on their own poem can be just as rewarding as reading the work of others
The write stuff: Putting pen to paper on their own poem can be just as rewarding as reading the work of others
 ?? ?? Short and sweet: Reading poetry to the kids can be a good alternativ­e to longer stories
Short and sweet: Reading poetry to the kids can be a good alternativ­e to longer stories
 ?? ?? Joseph Coelho
Joseph Coelho

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