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    The Last Fifth Grade of Emerson Elementary

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    clapped a welcome.

      Isn’t it funny? The one thing

      I’m looking forward to

      about fifth grade

      is how it ends.

      September 5

      PERCUSSION POEM

      Ben Kidwell

      Every time

      I try to write a poem,

      the pencil goes

      scritch a scratch.

      My pencils

      tick a tack

      drumbeats

      on my desk.

      My feet boom

      badoom the floor

      like a heartbeat

      always moving.

      My words

      take up a rhythm

      like the wind

      blowing outside.

      Scritch a scratch

      Tick a tack

      Boom badoom

      Outside outside

      How can I write

      when everything around

      makes an interesting

      sound?

      September 8

      PING-PONG RIFF

      Jason Chen

      I have to write a poem for a class project?

      My brain bounces around for ideas,

      but it’s not like a Ping-Pong ball,

      going back and forth in straight lines.

      (Not all Asians play Ping-Pong.

      I play football, and also

      saxophone.) A poem?

      My brain bounces back to summer,

      hurling insults during Shakespeare camp.

      Thou deboshed fish!

      How couldst thou require our class

      to compose verses every quarter?

      Didst thou say every quarter?

      My brain bounces from Shakespearean curses

      to quarter notes, filling up a page of sheet music.

      Soon, I’m bebopping a jazz rhythm.

      Words begin to flow from my pencil

      like notes from a saxophone.

      Finally, my brain starts riffing.

      September 9

      EVERY MORNING

      Norah Hassan

      Every morning I braid my hair for school.

      Sometimes I use the lemon oil my sister gave me.

      I rub a drop into my hair.

      The smell reminds me of when I was little,

      the lemon tree in my grandfather’s courtyard.

      I call him Jaddi. He is not Grandpa.

      Every morning I walk to school.

      There is a path through the woods.

      I follow Ben and his father.

      They look for mushrooms and insects

      while I gaze up at the trees, so tall.

      There are no trees like this

      where I come from, Jerusalem,

      but there are also no gold autumn leaves,

      no bare branches sprouting in spring.

      If they demolish our school,

      I hope they leave these trees alone.

      I love how cool their shade feels

      even though the days are hot.

      Every morning, Ms. Hill tells us

      we must write in our journals.

      In June we will have a record

      of our fifth-grade year

      to put inside the school time capsule.

      Before I write a poem, I talk to myself in Arabic.

      In Arabic, the words sound like a river

      flowing over rocks, jagged and smooth.

      I hear Jaddi’s voice.

      English isn’t good enough for telling poems.

      It sounds like knives and forks

      clanking in a drawer.

      September 10

      MY TEACHER

      Tyler La Roche

      Everything’s bigger in Texas.

      That’s what they say where I’m from,

      but folks in the Lone Star State

      never seen Ms. Hill.

      She should’ve been called Ms. Mountain.

      Just about the tallest teacher I ever met.

      Her hair isn’t dull gray

      but silvery, and shiny as the trumpet

      I’ve been bugging my mom about.

      Kids say Ms. Hill’s strict, scolds the girls

      in our class who can’t stay friends

      more than two days in a row,

      not like me and Mark.

      My first day at Emerson Elementary,

      Ms. Hill asked Mark to be my buddy.

      How’d Ms. Hill know we’d be friends?

      Does she have a Magic 8 Ball hidden

      behind that old black-and-white picture—

      our teacher, younger than my mom,

      scarf wrapped around her hair,

      marching in a big parade?

      Kids say Ms. Hill is going to retire.

      If the school goes down,

      she’ll go down with it.

      But having her for my fifth-grade teacher

      almost makes me glad

      my family moved north.

      September 11

      I KNOW THIS ONE

      Rajesh Rao

      I raise my hand.

      I say, “Ooh! Ooh!

      I know this one.”

      I stand up, too.

      I wave and groan.

      I stomp my feet.

      She tells me to

      please take my seat.

      My arm is tired.

      Please call on me!

      I want to speak.

      Why can’t she see?

      She’s giving someone

      else a chance.

      I wasted my

      right-answer dance.

      September 15

      SELF-PORTRAIT

      Rennie Rawlins

      At home, my mom says

      I could argue a tiger out of its own stripes.

      I act like I’m a brave tiger

      for my little sister Phoenix when I walk her

      to first grade every morning.

      But as soon as I say goodbye

      I’m more like a rabbit, small and quiet,

      wanting to blend in.

      Phoenix is real shy. She won’t like it

      if they sell our elementary and middle school.

      What if we get split up next year?

      She’ll have no sister Rennie to walk with.

      I hear everyone complaining

      about plans to tear down Emerson,

      but nobody’s doing a thing about it.

      Except George.

      He’s going to change things up,

      run for student council

      and save our school.

      I’m going to tell George

      he needs a vice president

      and I volunteer.

      I’m done being a rabbit.

      I will stand up tall and argue.

      I will roar like a tiger until someone

      hears what I have to say.

      September 16

      MY NAME

      Sydney Costley

      I used to like my name,

      until second grade,

      when we moved to this school.

      Jason Chen thought it was funny

      to call me Sydney Kidney

      and my twin Sloane the Clone.

      I used to like how our names

      aren’t too fancy.

      But my best friend

      is Rachel Chieko Stein,

      and her name is really pretty.

      I used to like how my name

      has so many letter Ys

      because my dad said

      my name made me “wise.”

      But now I am older.

      So many things are changing,

      I think I am full of whys instead…

      like why does the Board of Ed

      want to close Emerson?

      Why do they want to split up our class?

      And why does everyone but me

      want to spend three more years

      going to this school?

      September 17

      TWO HAIKU

      Newt Mathews

      Poems that have rules.

      Counting word beats in three lines
    <
    br />   makes sense to my brain.

      Little white frogs live

      along our school’s back brick wall.

      Look inside my hand!

      September 18

      TOP TEN THINGS THAT STINK WHEN YOUR FATHER DIES

      Mark Fernandez

      1. You can’t sleep.

      2. You watch late-night TV.

      3. You start acting like a talk-show host.

      4. Everyone but the new kid thinks you’re weird.

      5. They all ignore you.

      6. There’s no one to hang around with, so you miss your dad.

      7. The moms in your neighborhood feel bad for you.

      8. They make their kids invite you places.

      9. You think you have friends.

      10. You don’t.

      September 19

      AT THE MOVIES

      Shoshanna Berg

      My mother asked me to be nice to Mark,

      invite him to the movies with a friend.

      She said, “No one will see you in the dark,

      and if they do, the world’s not going to end!”

      My mother doesn’t know that Hannah Wiles

      judges everything I do and say.

      She tells me who’s my friend and what’s in style,

      and when we’re out at recess what we’ll play.

      So I took Gaby with me to make sure

      no one would say I asked Mark on a date.

      They ate my popcorn. I went to buy more,

      and there was Hannah, outside Theater 8.

      I hid inside the bathroom for an hour.

      I wish I could break free from Hannah’s power.

      22 Septiembre

      “EL PALOMITO”

      Gaby Vargas

      Espero el viernes la semana entera.

      ¡La clase de música!

      Cuando canto, muestro cómo me siento

      alegre, triste.

      Cuando canto, mis palabras

      suenan claras, fuertes.

      Pero cuando hablo inglés,

      me enredo. Intento decirle a Shoshanna,

      “Mark es cómico, siempre está bromeando,

      pero sus ojos marrón son tristes

      y esconden cosas que no quiere decir.”

      Intento escribir primero las palabras

      ¡pero escribir en inglés es aun más difícil!

      Buscar palabras

      en mi diccionario inglés-español

      toma demasiado tiempo.

      No encuentro las palabras correctas

      para decirle a Mark, “Siento mucho lo de tu papá.”

      Así que le enseño a tocar “El Palomito,”

      una canción triste de mi país,

      yo cantando y Mark con su guitarra.

      September 22

      “EL PALOMITO”

      Translated by Gaby Vargas and Mark Fernandez

      I wait all the week for Friday,

      the class of music!

      When I sing, I show how I feel

      happy, sad.

      When I sing, my words

      sound clear and strong.

      But when I talk English

      I make a mistake.

      I want to tell to Shoshanna,

      “Mark is funny, he always jokes,

      but his brown eyes

      cover things he don’t say.”

      I intend to write the words first,

      but to write in English is more difficult!

      To look for words

      in my English and Spanish dictionary

      is too much time.

      I don’t find correct words

      to say to Mark, “I am sorry for your father.”

      So I teach to him to play “El Palomito,”

      a sad song of my country.

      I sing and Mark plays his guitar.

      September 23

      CHANGES

      George Furst

      It’s strange how things change

      but also kind of stay the same.

      I’m still my parents’ favorite (only) kid,

      and we’re still a family, even though

      my dad has his own apartment.

      I still ride the school bus every day.

      We take the same route, but the horse farm

      we used to pass in first grade

      is an apartment building now.

      I know there must be other kids like me

      at our school, who need a place

      that never changes. Because parents split up,

      best friends move to a big house across town

      and you never hear from them again,

      but Emerson Elementary is always here.

      It drips and leaks. The gym floor is cracked.

      The walls could use some paint,

      but all our school needs is a little fixing up.

      Change is happening all around Emerson.

      That’s why we have to show Mrs. Stiffler

      and the Board of Ed it wouldn’t take much

      to keep our school from changing.

      Just like I have to show my father

      it wouldn’t take much

      to put our family back together.

      September 24

      WRITING TIME

      Katie McCain

      It’s writing time again?

      Some mornings

      my words are clumsy.

      They bump into each other.

      Smoosh

      boosh

      BAM!

      They’ve got as much rhythm

      as an octopus

      doing the chicken dance.

      Some mornings

      after we say the Pledge,

      my words are still

      crawling out of bed.

      They’ve got

      fuzzy slippers on.

      They haven’t

      brushed their teeth.

      P.U.

      This poem stinks.

      September 26

      LUCKY HAT

      Ben Kidwell

      September 29

      MY TWIN

      Sloane Costley

      No matter how many times I tell my sister

      appearances MATTER,

      she still dresses like some

      Olympic soccer coach

      might call her any second

      so she’d better be ready to play NOW.

      Suddenly, it’s a miracle!

      Sydney’s paying attention,

      asking me which teachers are stylish.

      The young ones, duh!

      No offense, Ms. Hill,

      but I have seen the old photo

      on your desk, and even when

      you were young in the 1970s

      that paisley scarf you wore

      wasn’t exactly fashionable.

      Last week, Sydney asked our mom

      to take her to the mall.

      Gasp! Have all my fashion lectures,

      the pictures from Vogue

      I taped on our bedroom wall,

      finally gotten through to her?

      There is a chance we might be popular

      if we dress cool and go to a new middle school

      (where no one calls me Sloane the Clone).

      When Sydney came home from shopping,

      I inspected her bags.

      A denim skirt, purple tie-dyed T-shirt,

      and cute navy blue Vans. Wow.

      “Well?” Sydney said

      when she tried on her outfit for me.

      “Finally,” I said, “you look like a girl.”

      September 30

      PICTURE DAY

      Sydney Costley

      This is why I don’t like skirts.

      It feels weird when I walk.

      These shoes hurt my feet.

      I wanted to look pretty. But I’m not.

      I thought a purple shirt would be okay,

      but I look like an exploding grape soda

      or a purple blob,

      and it’s not even Halloween yet.

      Why did I try to be

      not me

      on Picture Day?

     
    ; October 1

      PICTURE DAY

      Jason Chen

      When I leave the house

      my hair is gelled,

      my shirt is pressed,

      my teeth are brushed,

      my mom’s impressed.

      I look so nice

      I want to spew

      my Cheerios

      on someone’s shoe.

      When it’s time for pictures

      my hair’s in spikes,

      my shirt’s all loose,

      my teeth are pink

      from drinking juice.

      I look so bad

      I want to hurl

      my lunch upon

      some dressed-up girl.

      October 2

      POSTERS

      George Furst

      Yesterday

      my father came home

      to help me and my mom

      make election posters.

      They say

      “Make Furst Your First Choice”

      and “SOS—Save Our School.”

      After dinner, we sat

      at the kitchen table

      like we used to.

      My mom drew the letters

      with blue marker.

      My dad added red glitter.

      I stuck pictures of my face

      inside the big letter O.

      I used so much glue,

      I thought we’d be stuck

      at that table

      forever.

      October 3

      ELECTION DAY

      Norah Hassan

      Everyone is excited!

      Listen carefully while Ms. Hill explains how we

      Elect our student council.

      Candidates must sign up by Friday. George wants me

      To run for secretary.

      I can help him save our school because I am

      Organized and

      Neat.

      Does one election make me feel like

      A real American?

      Yes!

      October 6

      ODE TO MY GRANDPA

      Edgar Lee Jones

      He moves real slow,

      like one of those giant

      hundred-year-old

      tortoises at the zoo.

     

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