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  • Home
  • About
    • Our Teachers
    • Our Faculty Assistants
    • Contact us
    • Careers
    • Parent Information
  • Program Info
    • Speech Arts
    • Book Clubs
    • Writers' Room
    • Festival Group Class
    • Student Leadership Opportunities
  • Registration
    • Term Information
    • Summer 2025 Registration
    • RCM & Trinity Exams
  • Beyond the Classroom
    • Contests & Challenges
    • External Opportunities
    • Featured Student Works
    • Our Diverse Voices
    • Recommended Reads

  BASA

Mine Eyes are Lean By Ins Choi (Grades 10+)

April 20, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

Click here to listen to Mine Eyes are Lean By Ins Choi

Ins Choi is an asian poet who wrote the poem “Mine Eyes Are Lean” addressing the struggles and hardships of being an Asian actor. Choi addresses how having lean or smaller looking eyes does not define the perspective he has on the world and despite the racist views the society has upon actors, they are able to achieve grand things. He addresses the unstable income of minority groups and the unequal pay. He dedicated this piece to the famous actors Daniel Dae Kim and Grace Park. He is also the producer of Kim’s Convience a show about what it’s like to run a small store on the corner of a busy street as a Korean family.

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Father's Advice By Allison Albino (Grades 7-9)

April 20, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Father's Advice By Allison Albino

Currently a teacher at The Dalton School in New York, Allison Albino is also a celebrated Filipina American poet. She studied at Sarah Lawrence College and earned an MA in French Literature from NYU. Her poems have been published in Poetry Northwest, Aperion Review, and the They Rise Like a Wave poetry anthology.

"Father's Advice" discusses the tension between first and second generation immigrant families as they struggle to deal with the racism and prejudice faced by people of colour. Published under the name "Advice from my Immigrant Father", this poem was also a finalist for the 2017 Joy Harjo Poetry Award.

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The World is About to End and my Grandparents are in Love By Kara Jackson (Grades 4-6)

April 20, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read The World is About to End and my Grandparents are in Love By Kara Jackson

Kara Jackson is a 23-year-old singer/songwriter, musician and writer. She was born and raised in Oak Park Illinois and is a graduate of the Oak Park and River Forest High School poetry program. Jackson released her debut album "Why Does the Earth Give Us People to Love?" in april of 2023. She became the National Youth Poet Laureate at the age of 19 in 2019. She held that title from 2019-20. Jackson was chosen as a National You Poet Laureate because she was both an amazing poet at such a young age but also because she used her voice in engage youth all over with the issues that effect young women of colour. This specific poem "The World is About to End and my Grandparents are in Love" is about the strenght of her grandparents love. It shows that through all the things the worlds may throw at them, her grandparents will love each other.

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Speak Up By Janet Wong (Grades 1-3)

April 20, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Speak Up By Janet Wong

Award winning author Janet Wong was born in California, the child of a Chinese Father and a Korean Mother. However, growing up, she spoke neither Chinese nor Korean. She is the author of over 30 works of children's literature including picture books and poetry anthologies and her work has also been highlighted in numerous poetry anthologies not written by her. Most recently, Janet Wong received the 2021 NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children.

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The Type By Sarah Kay (Grades 10+)

April 13, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read the type by sarah kay

Sarah Kay is an author and a poet who is especially known for her Spoken Word (Slam) Poetry. She founded V.O.I.C.E., which is an organization that was created to educate, inspire, and bring joy to poetry. Sarah’s most famous piece, “If I should have a daughter,” was in a TED talk in 2011. Kay was born in New York and attended the United Nations International School in Manhatten. She attended Brown University, in the beginning, she was a chemistry major but soon switched to Arts and Culture. The poem “the type,” was written as a slam poem and created to empower women's voices. She is a strong feminist and advocate for women's rights and expresses this through her experience and the reality of being a female. She explores objectification and acceptance and says encouraging words for those who feel oppressed.

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The Beauty of the Busted Fruit By Natalie Diaz (Grades 7-9)

April 13, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read The Beauty of the Busted Fruit By Natalie Diaz

Natalie Diaz was born in the Fort Mojave Indian Village in Needles, California. She is the author of the poetry collections Postcolonial Love Poem (2020), When My Brother Was an Aztec (2012), and winner of the Pulitzer Prize. She explores with visceral language and poetic sense, the tensions of wanting, the inability to have, as well as the insatiable hunger that has festered within her. It is that hunger that festers in the heart “The Beauty of a Busted Fruit” that manifests in a beautiful reconciliation of trauma, healing that leaves behind the wounds, and the miracle of beauty that stains the lips an overwhelming red.

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Alla Tha's All Right, But By June Jordan (Grades 4-6)

April 13, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Alla Tha's All Right, But By June Jordan

June Jordan is an extremely well known black poet born in Harlem, New York. She is known for her powerful commitment to human and womens rights and political activism. Over her entire career, she has written 27 volumes of essays, poems, libretti, and different works for children. Jordan is engaged with the fundamental and important struggles of her era that include civil rights, women's rights, and sexual freedom. Her works are often very personal and a strong representation of personal experience. Both of her parents were Jamaican immigrants, having a difficult relationship with her father. She was sent to prep school where she was the only Black student there, but thankfully teachers encouraged her to pursure her interest in poetry and writing. Jordan has taught at many of the world's most prestigous universities including Yale and the University of California-Berkeley.

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Ode to my Shoes By Francisco X. Alarcon (Grade 1-3)

April 13, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Ode to my Shoes By Francisco X. Alarcon

Francisco X. Alarcón was a gay, Chicano educator and poet. While he was born in California, he grew up in Guadalajara, Mexico. He wrote for both children and adults and he gained recognition because he was one of the few Chicano poets to mostly wrote in Spanish. Alarcón love for writting formed when he about about fifteen, when he would transcirbe his grandmother's song. During his life, he wrote fourteen volumes of poetry, published seven children books and taught at the University of California where he directed the Spanish For Native Speakers Program. He won an American Book Award and was nominated for several others, including Pura Belpré Award for Writin,g, lambda literary Award for Gay Mens Poetry and Jane Addams Children Book Award. He sadly past awer due to cancer in 2016 when we was 61 years old.

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Visible World By Richard Siken (Grade 10+)

April 06, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

Click here to read Visible World By Richard Siken

Richard Siken is a queer poet, painter, and filmmaker. His book Crush won the 2004 Yale Series of Younger Poets prize, selected by Louise Glück and was written partly as a response to the death of an early boyfriend. His portrayal of queer love siphons both the violence and transcendental secrecy whilst preserving the purity of love and the “ mystery is that there is something to keep the light from passing through.” He is cofounder and editor of the literary magazine spork and is the recipient of a Literature Fellowship in Poetry from the National Endowment for the Arts.

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Complainers By Rudy Francisco (Grade 7-9)

April 06, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Complainers By Rudy Francisco

Rudy Francisco is an established Black American poet. He has been published and presented on several notable platforms, such as Button Poetry and Write About Now Poetry. He was also the first spoken word poet to perform on The Tonight Show hosted by Jimmy Fallon. Rudy's work is characterized by a conversational yet incendiary poetic stylem which is equally matched in his verbal performances. He has written on subjects varying from racism, love, religion, and much more. His works include two full-length poetry collections, Helium and I'll Fly Away. "Complainers" is a piece characterized by a sense of tough love - in it, Rudy encourages the audience to savour and champio what they have, as tragedy can strike at any moment. In the end, he leaves us with an important message: "Remember, you are still here."

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Poems in the Attic By Nikki Grimes (Grades 4-6)

April 06, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to Learn more about Poems in the Attic By Nikki Grimes

A young girl discovers a box of poems in her attic that were written by her mother while growing up. Being able to read her poems and share those experiences with her mother, the young girl has never felt closer to her mother. In response to this, the author creates a book full of her own poems and copies of her mother's poems as well. This book is called "Poems in the Attic" and is written by Nikki Grimes. Nikki Grimes is an African-American author that loves writing poetry for children and young adults. In her free time, she loves photography, fibre art, and beading. She has gotten many awards that include the "2017 Children's Literature Legacy Award" and the "2006 NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children". More specifically, her book "Poems in the Attic" has gotten the "Bank Street College Best Children's Books of the Year 2016".

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Since Hannah Moved Away By Judith Viorst (Grades 1-3)

April 06, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Since Hannah Moved Away By Judith Viorst

"Since Hannah Moved Away" is a poem where the themes of friendship and loss are explored in the perspective a children. The poem follows the feelings of a girl whose best friend, Hanna has moved away. Judith Viorst is an American writer, newpaper journalist and psychoanalysis researcher known for many of her pieces of literature. Notable works include "Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day" and "The Tenth Good Thing About Barney." Viorst is most famous for her children's literature and has revieced numerous awards including the New Jersey Institude of Technology Award (1969) and the Silver Pencil Award (1973).

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Not Tonight but Tomorrow By Miguel Algarin (Grades 10+)

March 09, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read

Miguel Algarín was a Puerto Rican-born poet and writer. With degrees in Literature from University of Wisconsin-Madison and Penn State University, he taught Shakespeare, creative writing, and United States ethnic literature at Rutgers University. He was a founding member of New York City’s the Nuyorican Poets Cafe – a multi-arts institution that gives voice to rising poets, actors, filmmakers, and musicians and provides support and empowerment for minority and underprivileged artists. He received four American Book Awards, including the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2009. Written in 1978, “Not Tonight but Tomorrow”, is an exploration of the inevitability of life. He meditates on the passage of time, old age, the turning of the seasons, and global climate change.

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Butterfly in a Boneyard By Jillian Christmas (Grades 7-9)

March 09, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Butterfly in a Boneyard By Jillian Christmas

Jillian Christmas is a spoken word and anti-colonial poet from Vancouver, BC, Canada. She has won numerous literary prizes for her work. This poem, "a butterfly in a boneyard", comes from her first volume of poetry, The Gospel of Breaking, which was published in 2020; she has since produced two more works, The Magic Shell and My Sweet Baby Book.

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Dear March—Come in—(1320) By Emily Dickinson (Grades 4-6)

March 09, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Dear March—Come in—(1320) By Emily Dickinson

Emily Dickinson was born in 1830, in Amherst, Massachusetts. She attended Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in South Hadley, but only for one year. Her father, Edward Dickinson, was actively involved in state and national politics, serving in Congress for one term. Her brother, Austin, who attended law school and became an attorney, lived next door with his wife, Susan Gilbert. Dickinson’s younger sister, Lavinia, also lived at home, and she and Austin were intellectual companions for Dickinson during her lifetime. Dickinson is thought to be bisexual, and there are many who believ she was having an affair with her brothers wife Susan. Upon her death, Dickinson’s family discovered forty handbound volumes of nearly 1,800 poems.

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Gone Camping by Nikki Grimes (Grades 1-3)

March 09, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Gone Camping by Nikki Grimes

Spring is a time of rain and flowers. Even in the deserts of the southwest United States, flowers grow in Spring, as you can see in this fun poem by Nikki Grimes.

Nikki Grimes was born in New York and started writing poems when she was six years old. She is also a jeweler and a photographer, and she used to live in Sweden.

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Lilacs By Amy Lowell ( Grades 10+)

March 02, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Lilacs by Ammy lowell

“God made me a business woman, and I made myself a poet.” Amy Lowell was a poet, performer, editor, and translator who devoted her life to the cause of modern poetry. Lowell was born in Brookline, Massachusetts, in 1874, into a prominent New England family and became a flamboyant woman whose behavior belied her upbringing. S he flouted convention with her proto-feminist poetry and unabashedly public persona. Lowell continued to publish volumes of poetry throughout her life, but Legends (1921) would be the last collection of her own work published before her death. In it, she uses 11 legends from around the globe as a basis for 11 poems. This poem, "Lilacs" is said to be one of Lowell’s personal favourites.

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Vancouver in the Rain By Regan D’Andrade (Grades 7-9)

March 02, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read Vancouver in the Rain By Regan D’Andrade

Regan D’Andrade was born to an English Jewish mother and an Indian Catholic father, in East Africa. She moved a lot with her family, from Kenya to England and back again, from town to town and house to house, and from one continent to another. The constant moving and the quest for identity have been intrinsic to her life path and search for meaning. She emigrated with her family to Canada from Kenya in 1975 and lived in Calgary for six years before moving to Vancouver.
Regan D’Andrade teaches writing courses and workshops developed to help the creator connect to the natural world with minimal criticism.

Her excerpt caught my eye on one of my walks and gave me a chuckle and that is why I am sharing it with you. It is truly an observation which we, all who live in raincouver can relate to whether we have learned to enjoy the rain or are in the process of learning to do so.

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Greenwild By Pari Thomson (Grades 4-6)

March 02, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to read some of Greenwild By Pari Thomson

GREENWILD is a brilliant adventure story about Daisy Thistledown, a girl who discovers she can do green magic--magic with plants! When Daisy's mother goes missing in the Amazon rainforest, Daisy must learn to master her magic before her mother--and all magical plants--are destroyed.

Pari Thomson is an author and editor of children's books. Half Persian, half English, she has lived in many places, including India, Pakistan, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Belgium. She now lives in London, UK, not far from beautiful Kew Gardens.

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The Sharing Circle By Theresa Larsen-Jonasson (Grades 1-3)

March 02, 2024  /  Will Sengotta

click here to learn more about The Sharing Circle By Theresa Larsen-Jonasson

Theresa "Corky" Larsen-Jonasson is a proud Cree/Danish Métis Elder with roots in Red Deer and Maskwacis First Nations. She lives her life according to the traditional indigenous teachings that saved her life. These teachings flow from her parents, her 93-year-old Kokom, Christine Joseph of Cochrane, aunties, uncles, as well as from the Goodstrikers, Williams and John Crier families, all of whom she loves immensely. Corky serves as a member of the National Collective of the Walking With Our Sisters missing and murdered indigenous women awareness movement and a proud member of Red Deer’s Red Feather Women. She is also a member of the Urban Aboriginal Voices Women’s Council and Red Deer Welcoming and Inclusive Communities Network.

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