POETRY
REVISION CHECKLIST
Step
1: Read through the Checks responding to the questions;
if the
answer is “No” – FIX IT
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Step 2
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Step 3
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COMMON SENSE CHECK
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Peer
1
Name:
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Peer
2
Name:
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- Does your poem say what you want it to say? Is the
message clear?
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- Does your poem make sense all the way through?
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- Are the lines in the best order?
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- Have you kept the same point of view? (For example, if
you start out describing a flower through the eyes of an elderly
gentleman, you don’t want to have one line describing the
flower from a child’s point of view.)
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- Are you happy with the poem?
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- Think of your poem as a picture, full of images. Are all
the images appropriate to the feeling you want to convey? (For
example, if your poem is about the peace you feel on summer
mornings, you probably don’t want a bloody-mouthed polar bear
roaring through the scene.)
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- Have you kept the same tense throughout the poem? (For
example, if you start out saying “I see” and “I want,”
you probably don’t want to switch to “I saw” and “I
wanted” later in the poem.)
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TOO
MUCH/TOO LITTLE CHECK
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- Are there parts of the poem that need to be expanded with
more detail or more explanation?
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- Are there enough details to make readers see what you want
them to see?
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- Are there parts of the poem that are unnecessary or
irrelevant and that could be deleted?
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BEGINNING/ENDING
CHECK
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- Look at your poem’s opening lines. Do they capture a
reader’s interest?
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- Look at your poem’s concluding lines. Does the ending
provide a sense of closure? Is the last line a memorable one?
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SOUND
CHECK
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- Again, read your poem aloud. Have you emphasized the most
interesting or important words by placing them at the beginning
or the end of your lines?
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WILTED
LETTUCE CHECK
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- When you create a salad, the last thing you want is a dish
full of nothing but boring, wilted lettuce. When you create a
poem, the last thing you want is lines full of boring,
wilted-lettuce kinds of words. Are the words you have chosen
fresh and crisp and interesting?
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- Is every word necessary? Does every word add something to
the poem?
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THE
QUIET AS A MOUSE CHECK
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- Even the bet poets can fall into the trap of using clichés
like “He was as quiet as a mouse” or “Her eyes twinkled
like stars.” Do you see any clichés you could eliminate or
replace?
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THE
SHAPE CHECK
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- How does your poem look on the page? Does it have an
interesting and appealing shape?
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- Are the lines of a sensible length?
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- Look at the line breaks. Do your line breaks make sense?
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- Look at your stanza breaks. A stanza in a poem is the
equivalent of a paragraph in prose. Poets usually use stanzas to
group related thoughts, to slow a certain order of ideas or to
indicate a long pause with white space. Do you have a reason for
your stanza breaks?
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THE
POLISHING CHECK
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- Are all your words spelled correctly?
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- Is the writing legible and neat or typed?
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- If you are writing in grammatically correct form, is the
grammar correct?
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- If you are punctuating the poem, is the punctuation
correct?
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