For your budding scientists, show this New York Times video about the physics of flying dandelion seeds – the ones that fly through the air when you blow on a dandelion puffball.
A poet admires the yellow flower’s undefeatable spirit.
Learning Objective: Students will understand personification in a poem that describes a dandelion as a king.
For your budding scientists, show this New York Times video about the physics of flying dandelion seeds – the ones that fly through the air when you blow on a dandelion puffball.
This time-lapse video of a dandelion from flower to seed head is sure to mesmerize your students.
More About the Story
Skills
personification, fluency, interpreting text, tone
Complexity Factors
Levels of Meaning
The poem challenges our usual view of dandelions as weeds, presenting their remarkable (often frustrating) resilience as a virtue.
Structure
The poem is 12 lines long and has an ABCB DEFE rhyme scheme.
Language
The poem contains some challenging vocabulary, such as haughty and reign, as well as personification and metaphor. The poet also uses “o’er” in place of “over” for the sake of rhyme.
Knowledge Demands
Readers will appreciate the poem more deeply if they understand how quickly dandelions spread and how unwelcome they are in many gardens.
1. Preparing to Read (10 minutes)
Set a Purpose for Reading
2. Reading the Poem (5 minutes)
3. Discussing the Poem (15 minutes)
4. Skill Building (15 minutes)
Get our brand-new Poetry Kit, which will take your students on a deep dive into the poem!