Poems about Teaching and Teachers
Poetry about learning, for teachers and students alike.
BY The Editors
Robert Frost once said, “Education is the ability to listen to almost anything without losing your temper or your self-confidence.” These poems and essays tackle the pleasures and perils of rousing knowledge inside and outside of the classroom. Students will recognize their schoolteachers and professors among the incisive portraits, and teachers will find serious and funny poems on the ups and downs of the trade that verges on vocation.
Poem for Christian, My Student
Gail Mazur
it doesn’t suit his jubilant histrionics
of despair.To David, About His Education
Howard Nemerov
Good for you, and you will have to learn them
In order to become one of the grown-ups
Who sees invisible things neither steadily nor whole- Marilyn L. Taylor
in that familiar, vertical direction
Transcendentalism
Lucia Perillo
while his lecture drifted against us like snow.Theme for English B
Langston Hughes
yet a part of me, as I am a part of you.
That’s American.For Elizabeth Bishop
Sandra McPherson
On it now is someone like you?- Yehuda Amichai
and said in my heart: here I learned certain things
and didn't learn others.Thanking My Mother for Piano Lessons
Diane Wakoski
my mother for working and always paying for
my piano lessonsReservation School for Girls
Diane Glancy
the blackbirds walk around our feet,
fly into our head.
Ars Poetica #100: I Believe
Elizabeth Alexander
is not all love, love, love,
and I’m sorry the dog died.Workshop
Billy Collins
but the next stanza is where I start to have a problem.- Geoffrey Brock
It was the first day of my first poetry class.- David Wagoner
 What all of us kings and poets and peasants
  Have dreamed: of not making the gradeOn Teaching the Young
Yvor Winters
Is in cold certitude—The Emperor’s New Clothes
Kate Gale
Of something.
to say something.
Of value.- Kenneth Koch
You are not wearing overcoat. He said,
You should do as I say not do as I do.- Marianne Boruch
Look, I told myself.
And waited to be marked.
A Teacher’s Lament
Kalli Dakos
And your spelling words went down the drainNapoleon
Miroslav Holub
Napoleon Bonaparte do,
asks teacher.December Substitute
Kenn Nesbitt
he looks a lot like Santa Claus.
The Properly Scholarly Attitude
Adelaide Crapsey
The hardly acquirable, properly scholarly attitude.The Poet Ridiculed by Hysterical Academics
W. D. Snodgrass
Or controversial ideas?The Academic Sigh
Russell Edson
Crisis of Conscience
Maria Hummel
Primary Sources
Jill McDonough
A Taste of Poetry
Judy Rowe Michaels
- Allowing students to generate the discussion is the key. All responses that respect the facts, all the facts, and nothing but the facts of the text are fair game, even if it means students trash the poem you’ve presented.
Ten Poems I Love to Teach
Eric Selinger