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Post: Indeed!
Posted by Kathie on 3/09/08
After suffering the plight of a student with creative ability and some high school teachers who were one- dimensional advocates for conventions, conventions, convention, this article nudged some long-squelched emotions. I already see some students in my second grade classroom who become overly consumed with conventions while trying to capture their creative thoughts on paper. How has this been instilled in these children at such an ealry age??? I always try to remember my own frustrations with the writing process when I was a student. I absolutely loved writing (in many forms) as a student. I also absolutely hated editing and revising was almost as dreaded. Why? Because those things were harped upon without any celbration of creative thought processes. Writing is an art and, as such, is differenet things to each writer. This is not some concrete process that can be neatly pigeon-holed with academic rigidity. Hopefully, this article can remind educators to celebrate and enhance the raw talent that passes through our classrooms.
Posts on this thread, including this one
Oh boy!! I hope all teachers read this article!!!, 3/06/08, by Ollie.
Thank you for making what I do make sense., 3/09/08, by mjg.
Indeed!, 3/09/08, by Kathie.
Re: Oh boy!! I hope all teachers read this article!!!, 3/09/08, by Kat.
What Writing Isn't, 3/09/08, by Carol Gorman.
What writing isn't, 3/09/08, by Annette.
Re: What writing isn't, 3/09/08, by marg.
What Writing Isn't, 3/09/08, by RWM.
What Writing Isn't, 3/10/08, by Mary.
what writing isn't -- Sloppy, if it's worth reading at all, 3/11/08, by Writers who respect their work take the time to revise it.
Balance!, 3/12/08, by wig.
Re: Balance!, 3/12/08, by ap.
Re: Balance!, 3/12/08, by wig.
Little Big Issue.., 3/28/08, by ALW.
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