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Explosive Poetry Power

English • Year 6 • 40 • 29 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England

English
6Year 6
40
29 students
26 March 2025

Teaching Instructions

The pupils have previously been learning about onomatopoeia. There topic is about volcanoes. Therefore, I would like a lesson where they must create an onomatopoeia poem about a volcano

Explosive Poetry Power

Overview

This 40-minute English lesson is designed for Year 6 students in the United Kingdom, building on prior learning of onomatopoeia. Pupils will channel their understanding of sound words into creating vivid, sensory-driven volcano poems, combining expressive language with creative structure. The experience will immerse students in cross-curricular thinking, linking their literacy skills to their current geography/science unit on volcanoes.


National Curriculum Link

Subject: English
Programme of Study: Writing – Composition
Key Stage: KS2 (Year 6)

Focus areas:

  • Plan, draft, evaluate and edit poetry.
  • Use further organisational and presentational devices to structure text.
  • Use and understand grammatical terminology including onomatopoeia, accurately and appropriately in discussing writing.
  • Draw on literary and topic-related vocabulary for effect.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, pupils will be able to:

✅ Recall and use onomatopoeic words effectively
✅ Describe the eruption of a volcano using sensory detail and figurative language
✅ Compose a free-verse poem incorporating onomatopoeia to enhance imagery and emotional impact
✅ Share and evaluate peers’ poems using expressive vocabulary


Success Criteria

✔️ I can include onomatopoeic words to describe the sounds of a volcano.
✔️ My poem uses effective imagery to show what a volcano's eruption might look, sound, and feel like.
✔️ I can reflect on and suggest improvements to others’ poems with confidence.
✔️ My poem has rhythm and structure, even if it does not rhyme.


Resources

  • Volcano stimulus video (short clip with sound, no dialogue)
  • Printed volcano image cards (variety of erupting volcanoes)
  • Pre-prepared “Volcano Word Bank” sheets, including sample onomatopoeia
  • Large paper for poem drafts
  • “Volcano Poem Planning” scaffold template (differentiated)
  • Classroom visualiser or projector
  • Vocabulary fans or dictionaries
  • Optional: lava lamp or red-coloured bubbling visual as creative stimulus

Lesson Outline (40 minutes)

❗️Starter (5 minutes) – Eruptive Hook

  • Begin by turning off the lights.
  • Play a short 30-second soundscape of an erupting volcano: rumbling, cracking, popping, hissing.
  • Ask pupils:

    “What can you hear? What words could you use to describe these sounds?”

  • Elicit responses and jot them onto the board. Focus on students naming examples of onomatopoeia.

🎯 Teacher Tip: Pinpoint words like "boom," "crack," "roar," "sizzle" – and link each back to the eruption experience.


📝 Main Activity Part 1 (10 minutes) – Collaborative Word-Building

  • Distribute volcano image cards in groups of 3-4.
  • Using these, pupils brainstorm possible descriptive words – especially sound words – that match what the images might "sound" like.
  • They complete their own copy of the Volcano Word Bank with help from peers or vocabulary sheets.

Challenge learners to:

“Reach for your senses – what does it smell like? Sound like? Feel like under your feet? What noises would scare you most?”

Support Struggling Learners: Provide sentence starters, e.g.:
– The volcano went _____ and the mountain _____.

Stretch Confident Writers: Ask them to start line-drafting 2–3 lines in imagery-rich free verse using onomatopoeia.


✍ Main Activity Part 2 (15 minutes) – Onomatopoeia Poem Creation

  • Pupils write a draft of their volcano onomatopoeia poem, using a scaffolded poem frame if needed (e.g., five-line starter: sound, sight, movement, feeling, repeat sound).
  • Encourage free verse, no pressure on rhyme – focus is on structure, voice, and imagery.
  • Circulate to offer writing prompts, vocabulary, or reframe challenging structure choices.

Examples to Inspire:

  • “Bang! The rocks crash and tumble—
    The earth groans under molten fury…”
  • “Crackles drift like lava lace,
    Whispers break the mountain’s face…”

Differentiation Options:

  • LA: Use cloze-style poem sheet with blank spaces for targeted onomatopoeia insertion.
  • MA: Use scaffold and own brainstormed words.
  • HA: Free-write poetic format; offer use of simile/metaphor with onomatopoeia.

📣 Plenary (7 minutes) – Lava Lounge Open Mic

  • Pupils read poems aloud dramatically (either in pairs or volunteers to whole class).
  • Class performs a "volcano sound wave": each table group chooses one sound from their poem and repeats it in sequence – building a full classroom eruption!
  • Use visualiser or large paper to display a poem. As a class, underline high-impact language, spotting onomatopoeia, imagery, and mood.

Ask Reflective Questions:

  • What made this poem powerful?
  • How did the sound words help you imagine the volcano?
  • Can we suggest a line to make it even stronger?

Assessment for Learning

🧠 Formative:

  • Observe participation in brainstorm and sound identification.
  • Discussion responses show connection between sound and meaning.
  • Poem writing demonstrates understanding of onomatopoeia usage in thematic context.

📄 Work Sampling:

  • Collect a few poems for deeper marking at a later time – check for sentence structure, word choice, imagery.

📢 Peer Evaluation:

  • Pupils offer positive feedback and “even better if” suggestions using traffic light cards or 2 stars and a wish.

Wrap Up (3 minutes) – Reflective Final Sparks

Ask students:

“What is one onomatopoeic word from today that really captured the eruption for you?”

Stick their chosen word on a class “Sound Wall of Fire”.

Optional link to topic work: Have pupils transfer their poem onto orange/red paper and design a lava-effect border for display in the literacy or sciences area of the classroom.


Extension / Home Learning

🌋 Encourage students to:

  • Record themselves reading their poems at home with family (using dramatic sound effects).
  • Illustrate their poem with a pencil or watercolour rendition of a volcano mid-eruption.
  • Write a reverse volcano poem from the perspective inside the volcano — what does it feel and sound like before the blast?

Teacher's Magic Moment 💡

Place a gently bubbling lava lamp or red light in the middle of the room during poetry writing to enhance the sensory immersion. Mix creativity, science, and language together – this lesson becomes a multi-sensory learning explosion.


Prepared for Year 6 English – tailored to UK National Curriculum
Previous learning: Onomatopoeia
Topic Link: Volcanoes
Duration: 40 minutes
Class size: 29 pupils

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