Middle School Limerick Poem Lesson

Students Write Humorous Poetry for Saint Patrick's Day or Any Day

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Example Limerick with Illustration - Kellie Hayden
Example Limerick with Illustration - Kellie Hayden
Students enjoy the silly limericks. Writing, reading and reciting limerick poetry is a fun Saint Patrick's Day activity or a humorous activity for any day.

Limericks are generally connected with the Irish town of Limerick. Wikipedia reports that the limerick form became popular when Edward Lear wrote the Book of Nonsense (1845). Lear wrote 212 limericks, mostly in nonsense verse with silly illustrations.

Limericks are supposed to be funny and to be remembered. This lesson allows students to learn the ancient art of writing funny poems. Students will also need to illustrate their poems.

Preparation for the Poetry Limerick Lesson

  • Collect various poetry books with limerick poems in them. One great book to use with this lesson is A Kick in the Head: An Everyday Guide to Poetic Forms [Ala Notable Children's Books, Middle Readers, Candlewick, 2005] by Paul B. Janeczko (Compiler), Chris Rashaka (Illustrator).
  • Create a rubric. Decide on the criteria and the level of quality that students need to reach to be successful in this lesson before beginning.
  • Write a few original limericks.
  • Make a handout for the students. It should specify directions for writing limericks. Examples should be on it as well.

Example Items for a Handout on Limerick Poems

Pattern of a Limerick

The Laughing Limerick website shows that “most (but not all) limericks begin with the phrase

"There once was a __________ from ________."

or

"There was a ________ _____________ from _________."

This is a nice limerick pattern to follow:

  • Line 1: Tell who the person is and where he or she is from
  • Line 2: Describe the person or tell something interesting about him or her
  • Line 3 & 4: Give more interesting detail about what was mentioned in line two
  • Line 5: Based on the first four lines, finish off the limerick with a surprising and/or funny ending

Rhyme Pattern or Scheme

The rhyme scheme or rhyme pattern isAABBA.

Example Limerick:

There once was a girl from Troy A

She would always try to annoy A

She looked like a moose B

She laughed like a goose B

Her silliness always caught a boy A

Directions for Limerick Poem Lesson for Saint Patrick’s Day or for Any Day

  1. Share three-to-five great examples of limericks. Limericks are meant to be funny. Try to have fun with this lesson. Leave the books in a central location for students to peruse later.
  2. Provide students a handout on how to create limericks.
  3. Talk about the form and rhyme scheme of limericks with the class.
  4. Students should have someone in mind when they begin to write the limerick.
  5. Give time for students to start a rough draft of the poem in class.
  6. Assign students to illustrate the final copy of the shape poem for homework.

When students bring in the final copy with illustrations, have students share the limericks with the class. The best ones could win candy or be posted on the wall. Make this Saint Patrick’s Day memorable by writing limericks or complete this lesson when humor is needed.

Kellie Hayden, Wendy Goss

Kellie Hayden - She is a 19 year veteran teacher with a master's degree in education and NBCT, 2000. Kellie teaches 8th grade language arts, TAG and ...

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Comments

Apr 27, 2008 12:44 PM
Guest :
thank u 4 the details
Apr 29, 2008 5:45 PM
Guest :
This poem needed to be much more thought out. This could have been written in 3 minutes. For a middle schooler I expect more effort in vocabulary and ideas. The designs are very creative though!!!
May 2, 2008 12:36 PM
Kellie Hayden :
The example poem is meant to show the form of the limerick. Middle school students have various levels in their vocabulary, and this poem could be imitated easily by a variety of students. A teacher could state the acceptable level of vocabulary in his/her rubric.

Thanks for your comment,
Kellie
Jul 20, 2010 6:49 PM
Guest :
Excellent ideas for a lesson, I am going to use this next week. After the students write their limerick I will show them how to record it on a Voki in their next technology lesson. I know they will love it. I think the example is fine, as the students get used to the pattern they will get more creative. They need to understand the rules and rhythm first, I plan to get them to write 3 or 4 and then choose their favourite. Thanks for posting your ideas!
Aug 4, 2010 3:04 PM
Guest :
THANKS 4 HELPING
Nov 9, 2010 2:05 PM
Guest :
it is very fun abut this limerick and i like to see some more
Nov 9, 2010 2:07 PM
Guest :
this is funny to me and i am writing it for my home work
Dec 13, 2010 4:00 PM
Guest :
Very good lesson next week when we write them I will deffinitley use it!
Jan 30, 2011 11:55 AM
Guest :
it was very good
Feb 14, 2011 4:57 PM
Guest :
THAT WAS AWSOME!!!
Feb 14, 2011 4:58 PM
Guest :
MY SIS LOVED IT TOO CUZ IT HELP HER DO HUR HOMEWORK!! @ 6:58 PM
Apr 9, 2011 7:05 PM
Guest :
cool poem i will use it 4 my home work cant wait 2 read more from you
Jan 11, 2012 2:08 PM
Guest :
loii
Apr 16, 2012 9:03 PM
Guest :
Thank you for the explanation and the phrase it really help me with my homework and help me make my own silly poems, once again thank you,
14 Comments
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