Sunday, March 10, 2013

Teaching Creative Writing in the English Classroom



“When learning characterization, students practice empathy. When learning plot, they practice strategic thought. When learning sensory writing, they practice close observation. When learning grammar, they practice exact language. When learning how to invent worlds, they practice imagination. These skills will be needed for every worthwhile endeavor they undertake in their lives whether they go into teaching or science, the arts, or the art of politics.”
Julianna Baggott

            Christine Esposito writes for njfamily.com and in her article entitled, “The Lifelong Benefits of Creative Writing”, she states that creative writing can be a beneficial to the way that students think. When students learn the process of writing a story they learn many things that will not only benefit their writing but also the daily interaction with other students and teachers. The article goes on to mention the Kean University Writing Project, KURP, where a group of educators have dedicated their lives to improving how students write and the influence writing has on the students’ lives. The KURP offers summer institutes for students and educators who would like to learn or improve their writing skills. After Esposito talks a little about KURP she goes on to give some guidelines on how to implement creative writing into the classroom and how to make it important to the students.

            First, she states that you have to start the students out young. This is one of the most vital parts to implementing creative writing. I know that as high school teachers we don’t get to start with the students but making your individual classrooms a place where creative writing is acceptable is one of the first steps you have to take. By starting your school year with a creative writing project, you can make the classroom a place where creative writing is a focus and a routine. The second thing the Esposito states is that the teacher should be a muse. Make it so the students want to write for you. Encourage your students! The third: DON’T be an editor or a critic. When you decide to take the time out of class and let your students write creatively, give them a chance to do so without the constraints of a grade of criticism. Let them be creative. Finally, Esposito says that in order to make the writing more important get it published. This shows that the student’s writing is good and is deserving of praise.

            Recently in my class I have tried to implement some of the things that Esposito introduces in her article. For one of my bell work assignments I had the students write a letter home to their parents as if they were in Vietnam fighting the Vietcong. I gave the students some background information that would guide them through their letter. In my classes the assignment got a mixed reaction. When I reviewed the students’ writing I saw a mixture of seriousness and sarcasm. The students that embraced the writing all did a good job, their letters were well written showed a great bit of imagination. The students that treated the writing assignment a little more loosely were a mixture of not trying and sarcasm that led to inappropriate humor and unacceptable length.

            Do you think creative writing has a place in the English classroom? Would you structure a whole lesson around creative writing?

Friday, March 1, 2013

Creative Writing Creates Community


In my Theory of Composition class we have been assigned an article review. This article review has been a great chance for me to dive into some readings about the community that is created from creative writing. I have been interested in this subject since I have wanted to be a teacher and one specific interest has been how to get non-creative students to become creative. While I didn’t use this article for my review, I felt that it was a valuable resource and offered a multitude of great ideas about this topic.

 

 Deborah Dean and Adrienne Warren have worked together to write a great article, entitled “Informal and Shared: Writing to Create Community”, about the benefits of informal writing and how these activities have affected the community within their classrooms. One exercise that I found fascinating is what Warren and Dean call ‘Scribblers’. This activity involves scribbling on a sheet of paper, passing it to a neighbor who then turns it into a drawing. The paper is then returned to the original student who has to write a story about the scribble. I thought this was a great way for students to be creative both visually and in their writing.

 

 Dean and Warren also talk about how students can create a sense of community when they are able to share their feelings about writing and how they write, even bad experiences can create a strong sense of community in a classroom. I thought that this might be a great way to address students who, when asked if they liked to write creatively, say they do not enjoy writing. By sharing their opinion and hesitations on this subject it can bring to light suggestions from other students about how to solve this problem. Sometimes this kind of feedback can be WAY more powerful than any advice a teacher would be able to offer, or maybe it’s just the fact that it’s coming from a peer rather than from an out of touch teacher.

 
This problem has already arisen in my short time as a teacher. I was working with an AP student who wanted to submit her writing to a writing competition. The student wanted my feedback about what she could do to improve her writing. When my suggestion included adding a bit of creative to writing to her more formal writing project, I seemed to have hit a nerve. She immediately informed that she despised creative writing and when I asked her why I learned that she felt she wasn’t any good at it. Because she was able to confess her hatred of creative writing, I was able to offer advice to help remedy this situation. I offered an alternative improvement that wouldn’t focus as strongly on creative writing.

 
I think that informal creative writing, writing that will never be seen by anyone else, is the key to get students back into creative writing. Has there been a time where you were asked to write creatively even though you HATE doing it? How have you been able to overcome this same kind of situation in your classroom?

 The link to the article is below!!