Crafting Poems in Form: Rhyme, Meter, Fixed Forms, and More

with Jonathan J.G. McClure

crafting poems in form writing course

August 14, 2024
8 Weeks

$545.00

No weekly Zoom call

$545.00Enroll Now

Find freedom in form! Working within the guidelines of a fixed poetic structure — from sonnets to less familiar forms like ghazals or triolets — can make your poetry more creative, not less. Solving the unique puzzles these forms create will push your writing in surprising new directions.

In this eight-week course, we’ll explore a wide range of received forms like villanelles, pantoums, sestinas, terza rima, and more. You’ll learn how these forms work, and read a wide range of examples. We will look at some classic poems, but our focus will be on contemporary poetry and how these traditional forms work today.

Moreover, we’ll demystify the language of rhyme and meter: you’ll learn what terms like “iambic pentameter,” “trochaic octameter,” and “slant rhyme” are all about, why they’re not nearly as confusing as they sound, and how you can use them in your own poems. We’ll talk about meter in the context of free-verse poems too: even when writing poems without a fixed meter, understanding what’s going on metrically can help you figure out why a line sounds especially good, or why it sounds off, and adjust accordingly.

Further, we’ll look at alternative approaches to meter: in addition to accentual-syllabic verse (the most familiar form of meter, used by everyone from Shakespeare to Robert Frost), we’ll discuss accentual verse (the dominant mode in Old English poems like Beowulf) and syllabic verse.

Each week will involve reading a written lecture exploring various forms and examples of each. You will write one poem per week in a different forms of your choice, and will provide workshop feedback on other students’ poems. I will give detailed, line-by-line feedback on all poems, with suggestions for revision. 

Who This Course is For:

This course is for poets who write in all styles! Few contemporary poets write only formal poems. Most poets who write in form today also write in free verse, and the lessons learned from exploring formal poetry will apply to all poems you’ll go on to write–both formal and free.

This course is recommended for students who have an active poetry practice or who have previously taken an introductory course in poetry. 

Learning and Writing Goals

Learning Goals

In this course, you will learn to:

  • Explore a wide range of poetic forms.
  • Demystify metrical terms and understand how to apply metrical thinking to your poems, both formal and free verse.
  • Explore what makes rhyme work well, without sounding forced or singsong.
  • Survey alternative metrical approaches like accentual verse and syllabic verse.

Writing Goals

In this course you will: 

  • Write eight new poems, each in a different form.
  • Receive detailed feedback on each, with ideas for revision (to be completed outside the course if desired).

Weekly Syllabus

Week 1: Regular Meter – Accentual-Syllabic Verse

This unit takes a deep dive into accentual-syllabic verse, the most traditional type of meter in English. We will also compare it to free-verse, poetry with no fixed rhyme or meter.

Assignment: Write a poem in blank verse (unrhymed iambic pentameter).

Week 2: Adding Rhyme Schemes

Still working in accentual syllabic verse, we’ll look at what makes for effective rhyme, and explore a selection of frequently used rhyme schemes (e.g., heroic couplets, terza rima, ABAB and ABAC quatrains).

Assignment: Write a poem in a regular meter of your choice, in a regular rhyme scheme of your choice.

Week 3: Sonnets

The most famous received form, sonnets take the requirements of a regular accentual-syllabic meter and a regular rhyme scheme, and add the additional constraints of a fixed number of lines and a twist called a “volta.” We’ll look at several types of sonnets and read a range of examples.

Assignment: Write an English, Italian, or Spenserian sonnet.

Week 4: Alternative Meters: Accentual Verse and Syllabic Verse

Accentual-syllabic verse is the most familiar type of meter in English, but it’s not the only way to approach meter. We’ll look at two alternate approaches: accentual verse (including other elements of Old English verse) and syllabic verse (including specific syllabic forms like haiku and cinquains).

Assignment: Write a poem in accentual verse or in syllabic verse.

Week 5: Fixed Forms with Refrains: Pantoum and Sestina/Tritina

This week focuses on fixed forms built around repeated lines or words.

Assignment: Write a pantoum, a sestina, or a tritina.

Week 6: Fixed Forms with Refrains and Rhymes: Villanelle, Triolet, and Ghazal

This week focuses on fixed forms built around repeated lines/words, plus a rhyme scheme.

Assignment: Write a villanelle, triolet, or ghazal.

Week 7: Borrowing and Adapting – Golden Shovels, Centos, Pecha Kucha, Found Poems, and Erasures

This week looks at poetic forms that borrow or adapt from other pieces of writing in some way. We’ll look at golden shovels (poems where the last word of each line forms a preexisting poem by another writer), centos (poems where each line is borrowed from a different writer’s poem), pecha kucha (a Japanese presentation format adapted into poetry), and found poems (poems in which a preexisting piece of non-literary prose is made into poetry), and erasures (like a found poem with redactions).

Assignment: Write a poem in one of the forms discussed this week, or a form of your own invention that borrows/adapts in some way.

Week 8: A Brief Look Toward Everything Else

There are many more poetic forms out there — we’ll do a survey of several, with suggestions for further reading. Forms include: abecedarians, gigans, monostiches, list poems, and more.

Assignment: Write a poem in one of the forms discussed this week, or in another form of your choosing (be sure to explain what it is!)

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Student Feedback for Jonathan J.G. McClure:

Jonathan’s feedback on each piece was thoughtful, objective, and helped immensely in my revision process. This is one of the best classes I’ve taken at Writers.com. Jill Thompson

The Literary Essay course was delightful. Jonathan’s knowledge, getting to the point with his comments, treating his students with attention and respect, and his sense of humor are at the core of his tutoring gift. The week on building strong sentences was of an absolutely revelatory quality for me. I’ve had a great writing experience with Jonathan again and wish to take the next step if possible. Please share this info with him. Joanna Kania

The course material was excellent. It kept me engaged and learning throughout. This class was so helpful because it focused not just on individual poems but on seeing work (your own and others’) in terms of a collection. The class work and generous attention of the teacher were invaluable. I wish there were more classes like this! Mary Paulson

Jonathan’s feedback was timely, insightful and presented in a way that made me want to strive to improve. I highly recommend Jonathan McClure as a creative writing instructor and “The Literary Essay” as a course that can refresh your take on the personal essay. Annie Abbott

Jonathan is one of the strongest instructors at Writers.com. His prompts are clear and flexible, he offers an eclectic range of poets to illustrate each element, and–most importantly–his feedback is extensive, specific, and professional. He brings close reading to each work each week. Nina Goss

The course readings were excellent – inspiring and varied, often captivating and sometimes bizarre. Between this class and the other I took with Jonathan (The Literary Essay) I feel like I have an infinitely better grasp on what’s going on in the world of contemporary literature, plus types of writings that were developed and built upon in the past. The written lectures were engaging and very readable; they made the assignments clear and definitely enriched my understanding of the readings and their relevance to the unit at hand.

I can’t overstate how insightful and useful Jonathan’s comments were. He always went very in-depth and gave very nuanced feedback. I actually downloaded all of his comments to everybody in the class so I can use them to help with my own writing. Jonathan clearly saw what we were trying to do with each of our pieces and helped bridge the gap between what was in our heads and what was actually being conveyed to the reader. He was always kind and encouraging but didn’t hold back on the constructive criticism (on both the macro and micro level), which is why I was happy to pay for a second course; I’m involved in a writing group with friends but we all tend to mutually shy away from criticism. Laura DeFazio

I thought the teacher was talented–what a great writer!–polite, well meaning, intelligent and diligent. The lectures were extremely well written and put together, and the exercises varied and interesting. I can’t find any fault at all! Becky Mitchell

This was the best class I’ve taken! Jonathan gave us detailed lessons, packed with useful information. He gave us assignments designed to increase our understanding and they did…Jonathan was generous with his feedback, pointing out both the strengths of our work and opportunities to strengthen it. He always explained why something wasn’t working or could be improved and gave examples of how. His suggestions really helped me to see how I could improve, not just that particular poem, but others as well. He was encouraging as well as constructive. He was excellent in every regard. Just want to thank you for this great learning experience. Barbara Ireland

Jonathan was an amazing teacher. The level of critique he offered was way beyond what I thought I’d get in an online course. He was a close and careful reader and his comments on our work were sensitive and insightful. GREAT lectures, clear, concise but in depth, with fantastic poetic examples. Yes, very happy. Chloe Coventry

This course has been fabulous: each week a great lecture with a twist, splendid sample of poems from known and less known poets, supportive and constructive tutorial feedback, phenomenal language. I’m still savoring the course contents. I appreciate your sense of humor, too ;). I’ve loved every minute spent here. I’m definitely taking part two of this course (or its sequel). In the meantime, I’ll read your poems (I wish you’d shared more of them during the course). Looking forward to writing with Writers.com again. Joanna Kania

I’ve taken many classes with writers.com and Jonathan’s class was one of the best. The material was interesting, his feedback always very thorough and to the point. It was obvious that he put a lot of thought, time and effort into making this class satisfying and engaging. Ariela L Zucker

I find you guys run great classes and this was no exception! I felt Jonathan was very thoughtful in setting up the material. He was engaged, thorough, and responded in a timely fashion. Andrea Sauder

Lovely! Very well structured and fascinating course. Very! Felt that [Jonathan] knew his stuff and felt safe with the commentary. Maren Bodenstein

August 14, 2024
8 Weeks

$545.00

No weekly Zoom call

$545.00Enroll Now

jonathan mcclure what is good poetry interview

About

Jonathan “J.G.” McClure holds an MFA from the University of California – Irvine. His poetry and prose appear widely, including in Best New Poets, Gettysburg Review, Green Mountains Review, and The Pinch, among others. He is the author of the poetry collection The Fire Lit & Nearing (Indolent Books 2018) and the translator of Swimming (Valparaíso Edicciones 2019). His work has been nominated for awards and honors including the Pushcart Prize, Best American Essays, and Best of the Net. He is a book reviewer for several journals including Colorado Review and Rain Taxi, and the former Craft Essay Editor and Assistant Poetry Editor of Cleaver Magazine.

A former instructor at UC-Irvine, Jonathan has taught a variety of courses in poetry and prose and edited literary magazines for four years. Today, he works as a writing consultant in Washington, D.C., where he is an active member of the city’s literary community.