Kindergarten Red Poems | Examples
These Kindergarten Red poems are examples of Red poems about Kindergarten. These are the best examples of Red Kindergarten poems written by international poets.
Red Ribbon Week and I have a new novelty junk for kids’ kit.
Pencils, suckers, bookmarks, red ribbons; the kids will have a fit.
There is a plethora of choices of novelties this week.
but I know better than to give them a choice or a peek.
So, I make an executive decision, quick like long-haul truckers.
Kindergarten through second grade gets the red suckers.
Third and fourth grades get the ribbons with shiny letters.
Fifth grade gets the pencils to fight over with their betters.
6th grade might get the bookmarks; they are drug-free but tough.
And maybe a sucker too; it simply depends on if we have enough.
Skip counting
Roundabout-ing
Happy shouting
Down spouting
Teeth clenching
Arm wrenching
Mean inching
Plain lynching
Day signals bright
Bees pure delight
One two three are right
We turn on the light
Kindergarteners red and blue
Pork belly pigs on notice too
Hot ham hocks for me and you
That’s enough of the Elmer’s glue
Skip counting
Red robin outing
Diamond mounting
Happy child pouting
Rhyming funny kindergarten joy
Fun for each little girl and boy
Skip counting, roundabout-ing
Happy shouting for every toy.
A kindergarten memory
I have is very strong
And no one can corroborate
Or prove that I am wrong.
We’re gluing shapes to paper
And two colors we could use.
I look at all the choices
When deciding which to choose.
I proudly pick the purple
And to go with it, the red.
My teacher, though, suggests
I switch to red and blue instead.
Her reasoning is simply that
My colors do not match.
As I remember it, she felt
She’d saved me with her catch.
Imagine if I’d had the guts
To stick with what I liked.
Perhaps when projects came my way
I might’ve been more psyched.
By nullifying what I chose
The teacher, I think, fails,
For all she did was knock the wind
Right out from ‘neath my sails.
An artist I will never be –
Those skills I don’t possess.
Yet red and purple still look good
Together, I profess.