Teachers Guide: Organizing the Contest Events
Download the complete Teachers
Guide.
Lead Teacher(s)
We recommend that each school identify one or two teachers to serve as the coordinators of
Poetry Out Loud. Duties for Lead Teachers will include enlisting fellow teachers to participate, distributing materials, organizing the school events, and keeping in touch with the State Coordinator.
Begin organizing your school event as early as possible in order to ensure greater attendance by the school community. We have provided
tips on promoting the event within your school and community.
Length of Contest - Large and Small Schools
Classroom contests can be held during class periods. A school's final contest should run less than two hours; any longer than that can be difficult for the audience. Ideally, 6 to 15 students should compete in each school's final contest. If your school has 6 to 15 classes participating in the program, send one winner from each class to the school finals. If fewer than 6 classes are participating, 2 students from each class may advance to the school
finals. If more than 15 classes are participating, you might consider holding grade-level competitions first, allowing two or three students from each grade to advance to the school finals. In structuring your contest(s), keep in mind that each recitation takes approximately 3 to 4 minutes. Judges will require another minute to mark scores, yielding a rough average of 4 to 5 minutes per recitation.
Number of Poems at Each Contest Level
For the classroom contest, students must prepare at least one poem to recite. Participants in the school finals must prepare two poems for recitation. Students who advance to the state and national levels must have three poems prepared. State and national contestants will recite their poems in rounds, not consecutively, with each student reciting one poem in each round.
It is strongly recommended that students who compete beyond the classroom level select poems of various style, time period, and voice. Diversity in the selections will offer a richer and more complete performance.
At the state and national competitions, students must meet the following criteria with their poem selections: one must be 25 lines or shorter and one must be written before the 20th century. The same poem may be used to meet both requirements. Lists of
pre-20th century poems and
poems that are 25 lines or shorter are available. Each judge should have a complete list of every competitor's selections in advance so they may familiarize themselves with the poems and develop a sense of diversity and range.
Poem Selection and Performance Time
Students must select poems from the official
Poetry Out Loud print or
online anthologies. (Not all poems on the audio CD are eligible for recitation in
Poetry Out Loud.) The maximum recitation time per poem should be about 4 minutes. Students must provide the names of their poems and the order in which they will be recited in advance to the contest coordinator. This will enable the coordinator to have copies of the poems collated for the judges and prompter, and score sheets prepared.
Venue
Reserve a school theater, auditorium, or other appropriate venue. The ideal setting will have a stage and theater-style seating. Competitors will stand alone on stage in front of the audience while reciting their poems. Other competitors may either be seated to the side of the stage or in the front row of the audience. Depending on the size of the venue, amplification may be appropriate.
Staffing The Competition
At the school-wide competition, you will need volunteers to serve in a variety of roles:
COORDINATOR (1 or 2). The Lead Teacher(s) may be best suited for this role. The coordinator will ensure that the event runs smoothly, all volunteers are present, judges are briefed before the event, scoring is accurate, etc.
EMCEE(1). An emcee will guide the competition from start to finish, providing welcoming remarks, introducing judges and students, and announcing winners. The emcee or the coordinator will need to keep an eye on the judges to make sure they have enough time to complete their scoring before the next student begins their recitation. Since judges may need a minute between recitations to finish scoring and hand in their score sheets, you may want to ask the emcee to entertain the audience or fill that time with biographical information about the poets or competing students (which you would need to have prepared). Another idea would be to have musicians perform briefly between recitations.
JUDGES (3-5), Accuracy Judge (1).
PROMPTER (1).
SCORE TABULATOR (1). During the competition, someone should input the judges' scores in a database so that no time is wasted totaling scores after the recitations are finished. An Excel spreadsheet works well for this purpose. A template is
available here.
USHERS. You may want to create a program for the event that lists the competitors and the poems they will be reciting, while also recognizing any local businesses that contributed to the contest. If so, plan on a few ushers to hand out programs.
Introducing The Poem
At the competition, the emcee should introduce each student as they come to the stage to recite. It is the student's job to identify the poem by announcing both the title and the author. (For example, "'The Lake Isle of Innisfree,' by William Butler Yeats" or "'The New Colossus,' by Emma Lazarus.") The poem must be recited from memory. Recitations should include epigraphs if included in the
Poetry Out Loud anthology, but a student's own editorial comments before or after the poem are not allowed. Author's dedications and footnoted translations included with the original poem are optional, and their inclusion or exclusion should not weigh in the score.
Scoring
A copy of the
Poetry Out Loud evaluation score sheet maybe
downloaded here. Print out the score sheets before the school contest, and fill in the names of the participants and the titles of the poems they will recite. Have these in the order of recitation before the competition, with one set for each judge. After each recitation, judges should turn in their completed evaluation sheets to the score tabulator, who will be adding up the scores throughout the competition. The Accuracy Judge's score will be added to the other judges' scores in the final tabulation.
Awards
A certificate of participation is available for
download here. You may wish to solicit prizes from local businesses, if appropriate. Select a school champion as well as a runner-up. Depending on the guidelines of your state competition, one or both of these students may advance to the state level. Please check with your State Coordinator.
Sample Schedule
A typical competition may look something like this, based on 10 students, an average recitation time of 3 minutes each, and 1 minute between recitations for scoring:
1:00 pm - Welcoming remarks and introduction of the judging panel, Prompter, and Accuracy Judge. Recognition of any sponsors.
1:05 Review of the evaluation criteria for judging the recitations.
1:10-2:30 Recitations, taking place in two rounds. In the first round, each student will recite their first poem. In the second round, each student will recite their second poem.
2:30 Five-minute intermission for scoring to be completed and winner and runner-up to be determined.
2:35 Announcement of winner and runner-up. Presentation of certificates and any prizes.