Vivid Word Painting
Overview
Lesson Title: Developing Imagery: Painting Pictures with Words
Unit Title: Poetic Patterns in School (Lesson 3 of 6)
Duration: 50 minutes
Class Size: 25 students
Age Group: Year 3 (Ages 7–8)
Subject: English
Curriculum Alignment:
- National Curriculum for England:
- English – Lower Key Stage 2
- Spoken Language: Participate in discussions, presentations, performances, role-play/improvisations.
- Reading – Comprehension: Understand poetry, including vocabulary and imagery.
- Writing – Composition: Plan, draft and write by using imaginative descriptions and varied vocabulary.
Learning Objectives
By the end of this lesson, pupils will be able to:
- Identify imagery and sensory language in age-appropriate poems.
- Use adjectives, similes, and sensory phrases to create vivid imagery.
- Revise an opening couplet to include descriptive language that paints a clear mental picture.
- Share revised work and reflect on the impact of language choices.
Key Vocabulary
- Imagery
- Simile
- Adjective
- Sensory Language
- Couplet
- Describe
Spaced Retrieval
At the start of the lesson, pupils will recall:
- What is a couplet?
- What rhyming pattern did we use last lesson?
- What types of words bring poems to life?
This builds on Lessons 1 and 2, where pupils explored rhyming couplets and rhythm.
Resources
- Extracts from the poem The River by Valerie Bloom (or a comparable age-appropriate poem with strong imagery)
- ‘Imagery Toolkit’ anchor chart (with visual prompts for the five senses and simile structures)
- Mini whiteboards and markers
- Printed revision grids for editing couplets
- Red editing pencils
- Sticky notes for peer feedback
- Audio clip of a rainforest (optional, for sensory immersion)
Lesson Structure
1. Starter – Show, Don’t Tell (10 minutes)
Purpose: Awaken the imagination!
Teacher puts on a short ambient rainforest sound clip (e.g. water trickling, birds chirping – but without identifying the sound yet). Pupils close their eyes and are asked:
“What can you see, hear, smell, feel, and even taste in your mind?”
- Pupils jot down five ideas on whiteboards (one per sense).
- Teacher captures stand-out responses on the board, modelling how descriptive words take something ordinary and make it vivid.
➡ Transition line: “Poets are painters – except we use words instead of colours!”
2. Read and Respond – Imagery Hunt (10 minutes)
Text Analysis Task:
Read aloud a short stanza from The River by Valerie Bloom.
Prompt questions:
- Which words help you imagine what the river looks like?
- Can you spot a simile or an adjective that helps create a mental picture?
- What sense does this poem speak to: sight, smell, touch, taste, or sound?
Activity: Pupils use highlighters to identify imagery on a printed version of the stanza. Each pupil highlights one phrase that stood out to them and adds a sticky note underneath explaining which sense it connected to.
3. Modelling – From Flat to Fantastic (5 minutes)
Teacher displays a simple flat couplet:
“The classroom is big,
It has a light switch and a rug.”
Guided Modelling: As a class, revise this couplet to include imagery and improve rhythm:
“The classroom glows with golden light,
Rugs like waves soft and bright.”
Anchor chart is used to guide choices:
- Adjectives
- Simile structures: “like a…”
- Verbs with impact
Encourage thinking about "painting a picture" for the reader with words.
4. Independent Task – Revise Your Couplets (15 minutes)
Individual Work: Pupils take their draft couplets (written during Lesson 2) and use the ‘Imagery Toolkit’ to revise them.
- Pupils are each given a Revision Grid to guide their edits:
- Original Line
- Add a Sense
- Add a Wow Word (adjective or more exciting verb)
- Simile (optional)
Support:
- Targeted teacher conferencing with 1 or 2 focus groups (pupils who struggled with vocabulary choices last session).
- TA supports a group of EAL learners using sensory word banks.
Challenge Extension: Early finishers write an extra couplet using the same setting (linked to school).
5. Sharing and Reflecting – Gallery Walk (7 minutes)
- At their tables, pupils swap couplets and give ‘sticky note feedback’ using the success criteria:
- Is there a clear image in your mind?
- Can you spot any sensory language?
- Did they use a simile?
Selected pupils read aloud revised couplets to the class.
6. Plenary – Word Artist of the Day (3 minutes)
Votes collected (cheer-o-meter or token-based) for “Word Artist of the Day” – someone who used language really effectively.
Teacher showcases one line with particularly effective imagery on the classroom ‘Poetry Wall’ to celebrate.
Assessment for Learning
- Teacher observation during independent writing
- Use of revision grids to scaffold and diagnose understanding
- Sticky note peer feedback to show comprehension of imagery
- Pupils’ ability to articulate how they improved their verse
Cross-Curricular Links
- Art: Students visualise and could later draw what the imagery in their poems conjures up.
- Science (Senses): Reinforces concepts of the five senses taught in earlier science modules.
Differentiation Strategies
- EAL/SEND: Picture word banks, sensory sorting cards, paired writing with structured sentence starters.
- Greater Depth: Encourage metaphor use and expanded similes. Allow exploration of juxtaposing sensory imagery.
Teacher Reflection Prompt
At the end of the lesson, teachers are asked to consider:
- How confident were pupils in revising their work independently?
- Were any sensory language types consistently underused (e.g. taste, smell)?
- Did peer feedback show an increased understanding of effective imagery?
Answers can inform small-group planning ahead of Lesson 4: Emotive Language in Verse.
🖼️ Big Takeaway:
Today, pupils didn’t just write poetry – they began to sculpt it, shaping scenes with every syllable. Let’s make words a canvas for their creativity!