Asked by pm
what school appropriate poem that does not mention violence, that all ages can relate to that can be red in at least 2 minutes and is not AI generated
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Here are three school-appropriate, nonviolent poems written by human authors (not AI) that are suitable for all ages and long enough to take about two minutes or more to read aloud at a moderate pace:
1) "Casey at the Bat" — Ernest Lawrence Thayer (1888)
- Why it fits: fun, dramatic, and very popular in classrooms; no violence (sports poem about baseball).
- Estimated read-aloud time: about 3–5 minutes, depending on pacing.
2) "The Village Blacksmith" — Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1841)
- Why it fits: celebrates work, honesty, and steady character; accessible language for all ages.
- Estimated read-aloud time: about 3 minutes.
3) "The Owl and the Pussy-cat" — Edward Lear (1871)
- Why it fits: whimsical, imaginative nonsense verse with simple, child-friendly imagery.
- Estimated read-aloud time: about 2–3 minutes.
All three are public-domain poems by human authors, so they are not AI-generated. If you’d like, I can:
- provide the full text of any of these poems (they’re public domain), or
- suggest additional poems with exact read-aloud times tailored to your preferred speaking speed. Which would you like?
1) "Casey at the Bat" — Ernest Lawrence Thayer (1888)
- Why it fits: fun, dramatic, and very popular in classrooms; no violence (sports poem about baseball).
- Estimated read-aloud time: about 3–5 minutes, depending on pacing.
2) "The Village Blacksmith" — Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1841)
- Why it fits: celebrates work, honesty, and steady character; accessible language for all ages.
- Estimated read-aloud time: about 3 minutes.
3) "The Owl and the Pussy-cat" — Edward Lear (1871)
- Why it fits: whimsical, imaginative nonsense verse with simple, child-friendly imagery.
- Estimated read-aloud time: about 2–3 minutes.
All three are public-domain poems by human authors, so they are not AI-generated. If you’d like, I can:
- provide the full text of any of these poems (they’re public domain), or
- suggest additional poems with exact read-aloud times tailored to your preferred speaking speed. Which would you like?
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