The Continuing Writes of Summer
It’s almost the end
of another Australian school year, so I am aware of the level of exhaustion
that abounds in schools, and the need to tie up a multitude of loose ends prior
to school closing for the summer holidays. Teaching becomes a race to the
finish line. The last week of school seems to take the longest time of all the
many school weeks. It is fatigue central.
Summer is taking its own sweet time to materialize this year, but come it will. I am also aware that on summer’s horizon
teachers will have some free time to relax and regenerate their energy
reserves.- A time for relaxation, holidays, family and recreation. For those of
you who have intentions of adopting a new approach to aspects of your teaching
in 2014, may I suggest that the summer holidays might present a great
opportunity to embrace the inner writer and embrace your very own writer’s
notebook. I know many of you read extensively when you are on vacation. Free of
the pressure of the classroom, it is possible to indulge in more personal
reading; becoming re-acquainted with favourite authors, or to read that book
you received as a gift. It seems logical to add a little writing to your extra
time. If you do this, it will mean that when the new school year begins you
will have compiled a sampling of text that will assist you to model aspects of
writing to a fresh group of students. It will afford you immediate writing
credibility with your students. You will have captured summer memories, made
lists, gathered artifacts, made drawings, gathered photos etc that will assist
you to connect more easily to the writing lives of your students. You will be
able to say, ‘Like you, I am a writer! Like you I make time for things I
consider to be important.’ -Well, that’s the hope!
I urge you to get
started over the break. Don’t put it off until the school year begins. It will
be too late then. -overwhelmed by a myriad of demands and organizational
matters –you get the picture, I’m sure. The world is full of people who espouse good
intentions. The challenge is to turn one’s self into an action figure.
Just as you want
your students to make a good start to the school year, you should expect the
same for yourself. I’m not suggesting you
to write to a rigid schedule, just quarantine a little time to document some of
the rich pickings of your summer. It will be a great investment in designing
curriculum – and it’s painless! The more you write, the more you begin to see
possibilities. I am not suggesting that you dedicate yourself to just writing
about summer exclusively. As always, you are best to focus on matters that are
important to you.- close to your heart.
Maybe your
reading may spark your writing, who knows?
I’m sorry, but
there is no better time to send this message. I need to reach you now while you
still have your educators cap on. Hopefully, it isn’t pulled down over your eyes
and your hands aren’t over your ears.
This summer,
don’t just dive into the surf. Dive into some writing. Try to approach writing,
in the same manner that many so often approach summer reading. The writes of
summer could be the stimulus to launch a great new school year in 2014! I can’t
offer a free set of steak of knives with that, but I know it comes with certain
intrinsic rewards.
feelings,
dreams, family history, daily activities, ideas, sketches or poetry.
Information and insights for yourself or have others share. Record the life of
others - holidays, visits to and from families, cultural and special events,
holiday observances, New Year, rituals, coming of age, weddings, christenings,
school days, leaving school, entering work, going to tertiary education, trips
overseas, birthdays, funerals, parties. photos, clippings, articles,
references, certificates, drawings, keepsakes,ephemera, artifacts and other
original material.
Comments
Post a Comment