55 Foolish and Candy Poems for 2nd Graders
Among the best methods to show college students the ability of phrases is thru poetry. This record of enjoyable poems will have interaction 2nd graders in severe, foolish, and nostalgic poems they will analyze and be taught from.

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1. Second Grade Superstars by Nameless

Themes: College, Confidence
Literary Gadgets: Repetition, Punctuation
Use this poem in the beginning of the varsity 12 months to have interaction college students in fascinated with the 12 months forward. It additionally has rhyming traces that college students can establish to begin to discuss construction.
2. The Porcupine by Ogden Nash
Any hound a porcupine nudges/Can’t be blamed for harboring grudges
Themes: Humor, animals
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
This foolish poem a couple of porcupine is a good one for vocabulary (grudge, nudge). Focus on how the poet creates a small scene in simply 4 traces.
3. On the Zoo by William Makepeace Thackeray
First I noticed the white bear, then I noticed the black
Themes: Animals
Literary Gadgets: Repetition, Rhyme
Repeated traces and rhyming phrases make this poem an incredible one to learn aloud. See if college students can learn it with out their voices shifting together with the cadence.
4. Mary’s Lamb by Sarah Josepha Hale
Mary had somewhat lamb/It’s fleece was white as snow
Themes: Animals
Literary Gadgets: Narrative, Rhyme
Nursery rhymes are a good way to introduce youngsters to poetry utilizing acquainted rhymes. In “Mary’s Lamb” you’ll be able to educate one, two, and even three stanzas fairly simply.
5. I Taught My Cat To Clear My Room by Kenn Nesbitt

Themes: Animals, Accountability, Humor
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
This foolish poem is a good entry level to poetry as a result of college students can analyze the poem for rhyming phrases and syllables, they usually can analyze what’s taking place, together with the joke on the finish.
6. A Foolish Crow by Andrea Crawford
Here’s a very foolish crow/Upon her head there’s a bow
Themes: Humor, animals
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
Use this poem to encourage college students to jot down their very own poem about one factor. They will begin their poems with “Here’s a very …” and go from there.
7. Snakes by Mariah Deitrick
A snake can glide backward and forward/They’re actually lengthy and laborious to cover
Themes: Animals
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
What nonfiction information are included into this poem? College students can learn it and underline the information that the poet included and the way they included some jokes too.
8. An historic pond! by Matsuo Basho
An historic pond!/With the sound from the water/Of the frog because it plunges in
Themes: Animals
Literary Gadgets: Enjambment (persevering with sentences)
Such a brief poem, nevertheless it makes a splash! Discuss concerning the vocabulary (historic, plunges). Then, discuss what sound the poet is writing about.
9. The Crocodile by Lewis Carroll

Themes: Animals, Humor
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
Poetry wouldn’t be the identical with out Lewis Carroll. This poem is a enjoyable one to learn aloud, to indicate college students how, even when the poem makes use of some phrases we don’t (“doth”), we are able to nonetheless perceive quite a bit from the tone and environment the poem creates.
10. My Canine Does My Homework by Kenn Nesbitt
My canine does his homework/at dwelling each evening
Themes: Pets, Humor
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme, Enjambment
You don’t have to attend till a scholar says their canine ate their homework to convey this poem into your classroom. Brainstorm all the issues with having your canine do your homework, then overview the poem and discuss which issues made it into the poem.
11. My Huge Fats Cat by Christian M. Mitewu
I personal an enormous fats cat/The fattest for miles round
Themes: Animals, Humor
Literary Gadgets: Hyperbole, Rhyme
One other homework poem, learn this one alongside “My Canine Does My Homework,” and discuss how two poets approached the identical topic.
12. The Parakeets by Alberto Blanco
They discuss all day/and when it begins to get darkish/they decrease their voices
Themes: Pets, Human nature
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme, Punctuation
Train college students how authors create tiny scenes with every stanza of this poem a couple of talkative fowl.
13. The Pasture by Robert Frost

Themes: Nature
Literary Gadgets: Punctuation, Enjambment
Robert Frost isn’t only for older readers. This inviting poem about cleansing the pasture and bringing in a calf is a good poem to learn aloud, or have larger readers learn and analyze it.
14. How Not To Have To Dry the Dishes by Shel Silverstein
If you must dry the dishes/(Such an terrible boring chore)
Themes: Accountability, Humor
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme, Punctuation
This poem’s construction, with the usage of parentheses, is value speaking about. How do the parentheses add that means? How does Shel Silverstein use them as an apart to the reader?
15. The Goops by Gelett Burgess
The meanest trick I ever knew/Was one I do know you by no means do
Themes: Humor, Manners
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
The Goops are a bunch of youngsters that make mischief your college students would by no means dream of! The Goop poems, like this one, are nice for speaking concerning the creativeness that we are able to convey to poetry.
16. If I Have been in Cost of the World by Judith Viorst
If I had been answerable for the world/I’d cancel oatmeal
Themes: Creativeness
Literary Gadgets: Repetition, Rhyme
With a repeated first line, “If I had been answerable for the world …,” youngsters’s writer Judith Viorst imagines what she might do. After college students learn Viorst’s concepts, what would they do in the event that they had been in cost? Write a category poem with the identical starting line.
17. My Finest Good friend by Abby Jenkins
Black and white/Thick and furry/Quick because the wind
Themes: Pets
Literary Gadgets: Simile, Rhyme
This poem describes a furry finest pal with out ever naming what it’s. What clues and particulars does the poet reveal that assist the reader know what they’re speaking about? Can college students write a poem about one thing they love with out mentioning the precise object of their affection?
18. Eletelephony by Laura Elizabeth Richards

Themes: Animals, Absurdity
Literary Gadgets: Made up phrases, Rhyme
This fun-to-read-aloud poem performs with phrases in enjoyable methods. Learn it aloud throughout whole-group work, or problem your larger readers to learn it aloud in a poetry slam.
19. The Forest by Annette Wynne
The forest is a city of bushes/The place they dwell fairly at their ease
Theme: Nature
Literary Gadgets: Metaphor
Use this poem to show ways in which poets use comparisons to explain issues, like a “city of bushes.”
20. The Butterfly Ballad by Man Belleranti
Butterfly begins as an egg/as an egg, as an egg
Themes: Nature, Life Cycle
Literary Gadgets: Repetition, Rhyme
Repeated phrases and phrases make this poem a “ballad” concerning the life cycle of a butterfly.
21. I Made a Meme This Morning by Kenn Nesbitt
I made a meme this morning/I posted it on-line
Themes: Fashionable life, Expertise
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
A enjoyable poem about know-how and web literacy. Learn this one to speak about what college students must be pondering once they submit on-line and capitalize on the rhythm to assist college students bear in mind to suppose earlier than they submit.
22. In chilly spring air by Reginald Gibbons
In chilly/spring air the/white wisp–
Themes: Nature, Seasons
Literary Gadgets: Enjambment, Construction
The poet creates an attention-grabbing construction with their phrases on this poem. Discuss how the best way the phrases are organized makes college students take into consideration the air and wisps of wind.
23. The Storm by Dorothy Aldis

Themes: Nature, Climate
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
Descriptive phrases and phrases make this depiction of experiencing a storm take the reader proper to the scene. Discuss concerning the particulars that make the scene come to life.
24. Seashell by James Berry
Shell at my ear/Come share how I hear
Themes: Nature
Literary Gadgets: Personification, Simile
Examine how the poet makes use of metaphor and outline to clarify what he hears inside a seashell.
25. A Jelly-Fish by Marianne Moore
Seen, Invisible/A fluctuating allure
Themes: Animals
Literary Gadgets: Construction
Have a look at photos of jellyfish and browse this poem. Discuss how Marianne Moore describes the jellyfish and the way the poem is likely to be written utilizing extra fashionable language.
26. Rain Sound by Lillian Morrison
At first its like drumming/because it patters down and stops
Themes: Rain, Nature
Literary Gadgets: Personification, Metaphor
This poem is nice for introducing metaphors, like rain drumming after which sounding like an animal.
27. Nicknames by Kenn Nesbitt
My aunt calls me “Elizabeth”/My grandma calls me “Liz”
Themes: Names, Humor
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme, Distinction
A enjoyable poem about all of the nicknames for Elizabeth, and all of the methods one child remains to be known as the improper identify. It is a enjoyable poem to speak about names earlier than college students write poems about their very own names and nicknames.
28. Dust on My Shirt by Jeff Foxworthy
There’s dust on my shirt/And leaves in my hair
Themes: Nature, Play
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
The poet describes taking part in outdoors on this brief poem. College students can discuss the best way the poet describes taking part in outdoors and what he likes concerning the expertise.
29. Tiger by Valerie Price
The tiger/Has swallowed/a black solar.
Themes: Animals
Literary Gadgets: Enjambment, Imagery
This poem describes artistic methods the tiger acquired his stripes and black eyes. Use it to encourage college students to consider different methods animals might get their distinctive options. Then, they will write poems about animals they like.
30. Your Finest by Barbara Vance

Themes: Encouragement
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
It is a nice poem to begin the 12 months or week with (or to learn after a college break). College students can mirror on the message about doing all of your finest and attempting once more.
31. Strolling With My Iguana by Brian Moses
I’m strolling/with my iguana.
Themes: Humor, Creativeness
Literary Gadgets: Repetition
A foolish poem about an iguana going for a stroll. How does the poet mix factual data with foolish particulars to create the story?
32. Magic Carpet by Shel Silverstein
You have got a magic carpet/That may whiz you thru the air
Themes: Humor
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
It’s not a poetry unit with out Shel Silverstein. On this case, he imagines what may very well be with an abnormal carpet. What might college students think about to your class rug after studying this poem?
33. The Owl and the Pussy-Cat by Edward Lear
The owl and the pussy-cat went to sea/In a fantastic pea-green boat
Themes: Journey
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme, Narrative
It is a basic poem that college students might have already heard. It’s an incredible introduction to poems that inform an extended, shall we embrace, epic story.
34. The Tyger by William Blake
Tyger, Tyger, burning vibrant/Within the forests of the evening
Themes: Energy of Nature
Literary Gadgets: Imagery, Rhetorical questions
This poem has superior vocabulary (symmetry, immortal), and you need to use a number of stanzas to show college students new phrases and discuss how the tiger was created. (Learn it with “Tiger” by Valerie Price to get two concepts on how tigers happened.)
35. The Jabberwocky by Lewis Carroll
‘Twas brillig and the slithy toves/Did gyre and gimble within the wabe
Themes: Hero’s Journey, Creativeness
Literary Gadgets: Made up language, Alliteration
“The Jabberwocky” is a sophisticated poem for those who attempt to learn and analyze it. But it surely’s an incredible poem to only take heed to. Learn this one aloud and ask college students what they give thought to the power and tone of the poem. It’s something however severe.
36. The Quangle Wangle’s Hat by Edward Lear
On the highest of the Crumpety Tree/The Quangle Wangle sat
Themes: Humor, Story
Literary Gadgets: Narrative, Hyperbole
Much like “The Jabberwocky,” this poem is all about read-aloud. Learn it and pay attention for the tone and the way the foolish phrases flip the poem right into a enjoyable auditory journey.
37. When the Instructor Isn’t Wanting by Kenn Nesbitt

Themes: College, Humor
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
Begin the 12 months with this poem, or learn it as an tutorial message earlier than you are taking break day and college students could have a substitute.
38. The Story of Custard the Dragon by Ogden Nash
Belinda lived in somewhat white home/With somewhat black kitten and somewhat grey mouse
Themes: Animals, Creativeness
Literary Gadgets: Simile, Rhyme
One other poem that tells an extended story. Learn this poem and discuss what’s taking place in every stanza.
39. For Sale by Shel Silverstein
One sister on the market!/One crying and spying younger sister on the market
Themes: Sibling rivalry, Humor
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme, Questions
It is a quintessential Silverstein poem, with a relatable matter and enjoyable method. College students can discuss what is going on and the joke Silverstein has woven into the phrases.
40. The Land of Counterpane by Robert Louis Stevenson
After I was sick and lay a-bed/I had two pillows at my head
Themes: Creativeness
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
“The Land of Counterpane” has a construction that 2nd graders can analyze (AABB) and is a couple of matter that they are going to discover acquainted: a day spent dwelling sick in mattress.
41. Adventures of Isabel by Ogden Nash
Isabel met an unlimited bear/Isabel, Isabel didn’t care
Themes: Journey, Bravery
Literary Gadgets: Repetition, Imagery
A fairy story inside a poem, learn “Adventures of Isabel” to explain actually what occurs, and to speak about how the poem progresses from one foolish scene to a different.
42. Homework! Oh, Homework! by Jack Prelutsky
Homework! Oh homework!/I hate you. You stink.
Themes: Homework, Humor
Literary Gadgets: Hyperbole, Rhyme
What’s elementary faculty poetry with out Jack Prelutsky? “Homework! Oh Homework!” is a good way to begin college students on odes. They will learn this ode to poetry, and write about one thing they both love or hate as a lot as Prelutsky hates homework.
43. Recipe for a Hippopotamus Sandwich by Shel Silverstein

Themes: Humor, Meals
Literary Gadgets: Repetition, Rhyme
A hippo sandwich is basic Silverstein. College students can learn this poem and draw an illustration to go together with it to indicate how they interpret the poem.
44. Wynken, Blynken, and Nod by Eugene Discipline
Wynken, Blynken and Nod one evening/Sailed off in a wood shoe
Themes: Journey, Nighttime
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme, Repetition
That is one other poem that college students could also be aware of from preschool or nursery rhyme readings. It’s additionally an epic story of three youngsters who sail off in a wood shoe. Strategy this poem because the story of a journey. How does the poet create the nighttime environment and occasions alongside their journey?
45. The Duck and the Kangaroo by Edward Lear
Stated the duck to the kangaroo/’Good gracious, the way you hop!’
Themes: Animals
Literary Gadgets: Narrative, Rhyme
This poem imagines interactions between completely different animals. Use a number of stanzas and browse the poem to seize the cadence and the foolish interactions between animals.
46. Casey on the Bat by Ernest Lawrence Thayer
The outlook wasn’t good for the Mudville 9 that day
Themes: Baseball, Defeat
Literary Gadgets: Imagery, Rhyme
This poem is ideal for teenagers who’re obsessive about baseball, or for teenagers who suppose poetry is just about animals and seasons. “Casey on the Bat” is the epic poem a couple of baseball group, with plenty of baseball vocabulary and scene constructing.
47. The Purple Cow by Gelett Burgess
I by no means noticed a purple cow/I by no means hope to see one
Themes: Absurdity, Humor
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme
This catchy poem that doubles as a rhyme is nice to rapidly learn and analyze throughout morning assembly or a mini-lesson. It additionally has a helpful ethical about sustaining perspective.
48. The Duel by Eugene Discipline
The gingham canine and the calico cat/Facet by aspect on the desk sat
Themes: Humor, Creativeness
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme, Narrative
This poem is written in older English, so it’s good for a read-aloud. Discuss concerning the vocabulary (duel, gingham, slept a wink), then discuss what’s taking place in every stanza.
49. Sarah Cynthia Sylvia Stout Would Not Take the Rubbish Out by Shel Silverstein
Sarah Cynthia Sylvia Stout/Wouldn’t take the rubbish out/She’d scour the pots and scrape the pans
Themes: Accountability, Humor
Literary Gadgets: Alliteration, Rhyme
Among the best Silverstein poems (in our opinion), this poem is foolish, enjoyable, and builds to an essential ethical about duty. It additionally makes use of alliteration to bolster the read-aloud-ability typical of Silverstein’s poems.
50. The Spider and the Fly by Mary Howitt
“Will you stroll to my parlor?” stated the Spider to the Fly.
Themes: Vainness, Flattery
Literary Gadgets: Personification, Alliteration
The interplay between a spider and a fly creates a macabre poem about succumbing to flattery and self-importance. Learn it at Halloween time, or while you’re speaking about dialogue and the way authors use dialogue to maneuver tales ahead.
51. The Story of the Solar and the Moon by Kenn Nesbitt
The solar was in his bathing swimsuit/the moon in her pajamas
Themes: Relationships, Friendship
Literary Gadgets: Personification
This poem is a good instance of personification. The solar and moon are each personified and described doing varied actions round the home. Discuss why a poet would personify the solar and moon. How does it assist talk the poem’s message?
52. Clouds by Christina Rossetti

Themes: Alternative
Literary Gadgets: Rhyme, Repetition
Energetic poems like this are nice to make use of throughout circle time. Have college students take heed to the poem and faux they’re the sheep strolling or standing nonetheless. With older college students, discuss what themes are within the poem; is that this poem nearly sheep or is the poet making a broader level?
53. The Acrobats by Shel Silverstein
I’ll swing/by my ankles/She’ll cling/to your knees
Themes: Enjoyable, Humor
Literary Gadgets: Construction, Rhyme
An amazing instance of how one rhyming sound could be carried by means of a poem (on this case the lengthy ‘e’ sound in sneeze and breeze).
54. When Tillie Ate the Chili by Jack Prelutsky
When Tillie ate the chilli/She erupted from her seat
Themes: Humor
Literary Gadgets: Hyperbole, Rhyme
This poem is an introduction to hyperbole, with dramatic descriptions of what occurs to Tillie after she eats a bowl of spicy chili and “erupts.”
55. The Crocodile’s Toothache by Shel Silverstein
The crocodile/went to the dentist/And sat down within the chair
Themes: Humor, Absurdity
Literary Gadgets: Narrative
A brief story in a stanza, learn this poem and discuss how Silverstein builds suspense from the primary line to the final.
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