Poetry
Seedfolks & 4 I's
Figurative Language
4 I's Vocab
Ms. A Facts
100

What is a stanza?

This group of lines makes up a single unit or paragraph in a poem.

100

Kim planting seeds to honor her father shows she believes in her family’s story and strength. What kind of liberation is this?

What is internalized definition?

100

“The warm bread smelled like home.”

Imagery

100

Feeling pride in your cultural identity.

Internalized

100

What is Ms. A's favorite Holiday? 

Christmas OR New Years Eve

200

What is rhyme?

These are words that sound alike, especially at the end of a line.

200

When neighbors start talking and helping each other across fences, what type of liberation is happening?

What is interpersonal?

200

“Her smile was as bright as the sun.”

Simile

200

The belief that one culture’s values are “normal.”

Ideological

200

What was the 1st school Ms. A worked at?

Helix

300

What is rhythm?

This refers to the beat or musical quality of a poem, created by the rise and fall of language.

300

When the city ignores the empty lot until the community reclaims it, what kind of oppression is that?

What is institutional oppression?

300

In Sam’s chapter, he compares people to “different seeds needing the same water.” What is this an example of?

Metaphor

300

Redlining, school tracking, or voting laws.

Institutional

300

How many siblings does Ms. A have? 

2! 

Older brother and sister 

400

What is symbolism?

When a real, physical object represents an abstract concept or idea.

400

Society assumes poor immigrant communities can’t create beauty. That harmful idea represents what level of oppression?

What is ideological?

400

“The stars danced across the night sky.”

Personification

400

Microaggressions or allyship in daily interactions.

Interpersonal

400

Where did Ms. A get her Undergrad and Masters degree from? (2 schools)

SDSU, and HTH Graduate School 

500

A poet uses vivid imagery and rhythm to celebrate resilience in their community. What two literary choices strengthen the poem’s purpose?

Diction and tone. They help communicate pride and empowerment.

500

A community garden breaks stereotypes and challenges unfair systems. How do interpersonal and institutional liberation connect here?

People’s cooperation (interpersonal) begins to challenge unjust systems (institutional)?

500

The garden looks like a junk lot from the outside, but inside it’s full of life and growth. What kind of figurative contrast is that?

Irony

500

A dress code bans cultural hairstyles while claiming to promote “professionalism.” What two levels of oppression are seen here?

Institutional and ideological

500

What is Ms. A's middle name?

Angelica 

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