Western Bay of Plenty Playcentre
Association
National Children’s Poetry Competition 2013
1st
of April to the 31st of May 2013. And we’re inviting you to give it a go!
What
makes us special?
Is ‘the No. 8 wire’
and ‘do-it-yourself spirit’ still alive and kicking and what kind of funny are
we? How can we give our children a sense of who they are and their place
in the world as globalisation washes over our not-so-isolated shores?
Are we
really as dark as some of our some storytellers describe us and what part does
our unique and beautiful environment play in how we define ourselves?
The
Treaty of Waitangi, biculturalism and the Pacific Ocean adds another thread
woven into our psyche. Auckland is not only our largest city but also the largest
Polynesian city in the world.
These are questions that the
Western Bay of Plenty Playcentre Association wants to explore through its first
National Children’s Poetry Competition. We’re seeking poems that explore
word play and metrical beat, such as activity and counting poems, and
especially poems with New Zealand content. Most of all we want poems that
are fun to read aloud and listen to. WBOP Playcentre Association is
running this competition from the 1st of April to the 31st
of May 2013. And we’re inviting you
to give it a go!
Our
competition judge is local poet and performer Marcel Currin, known for his own
brand of funny, whose writing has been published in New Zealand magazines,
literary journals and anthologies.
Marcel will be supported in this
process by local storyteller Tommy ‘Kapai’ Wilson as we’re accepting poems in
Te Reo and English, or a blend of both. Tommy
Kapai works with and for children, and was the initiator of the Kapai series that includes Kapai the
Kiwi and Kapai's
Thermal Adventure. Since then he’s given us the Cuzzies series and
the adventures of Scoop and Scribe.
For centuries
writers have used rhythm and rhyme to create poems that both stimulate and
please the minds of the young. Reading
together is a well-known and effective means of introducing children to words
and the world, and fosters closer relationships with parents and caregivers.
We want to produce books of children’s poetry that reflect
what’s unique about us, our particular brand of fun; that celebrate families
growing together. We’ll do this by publishing the fifteen winning poems from adult and secondary school writers
decorated with artwork from our thirteen Playcentres within the Western Bay of
Plenty.
For details on how
to enter visit www.bayplay.org.nz
or email Kaye
Hubner at president@bayplay.org.nz.
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