The Impact of Teachers Who Write
THE
impact of TEACHERs WHO Write
I remain very aware of the influence a
teacher’s own writing has on impressionable students. Some teachers believe
they have little actual power when it comes to the attitudes of young learners.
The reality is, teachers control the very climate in the classroom. I
frequently find myself invoking this quote from educator, Haim Ginott.
‘I’ve
come to a frightening conclusion that I am the decisive element in the
classroom. It’s my personal approach that creates the climate. It’s my daily
mood that makes the weather. As a teacher, I possess a tremendous power to make
a child’s life miserable or joyous. I can be a tool of torture or an instrument
of inspiration. I can humiliate or heal. In all situations, it is my response
that decides whether a crisis will be escalated or de-escalated and a child
humanized or dehumanized.’
So, when a teacher presents to students
as a fellow writer, the children’s world view of writing is challenged.
Something quite magical begins to take place in the classroom. The teacher
begins to learn progressively better ways to write, and from that, teach.
As a result, the inexperienced writer receives quite clear demonstrations regarding how writing possesses a power to entertain, inform, persuade, provoke, and comfort depending on the writer’s intent.
The young writer also benefits from observing the various processes
undertaken by a more experienced and proficient writer. There is so much to be
gained from this.
While rummaging through some old
notebooks last week, my eyes fell upon this entry:
'What
are we teaching our students about writing, if it isn't what actual writers
do?'
Vicki
Meigs-Kahlenberg.
This quote goes directly to the heart
of authentic practice! What can less experienced writers learn from the
processes employed by these experienced writers? This is curriculum fodder
centred on how meaningful writing outcomes are accomplished.
The eternal question –why do we write? no doubt passes through a child’s mind at some point. Particularly those children who grow up in homes where no one ever chooses to engage in the act of writing.
This only increases the need for teachers to be viewed as living, breathing
advocates and participants in the literate acts of reading and writing.
The literate lives of teachers need to be highly visible and celebrated acts.
Reflect for a moment upon your current
writing practices and what impact such practices might have on the attitudes
of impressionable student writers.
Where I get my ideas
How I choose a notebook
How I gather notebook entries
How I identify a personal writing
project
How I overcome writing roadblocks
How I use re-reading
Where I choose to write
When I choose to write
How I consider my audience of readers
How reading informs my writing
How other writers inform my writing
How I employ my senses
How I distance myself from the
writing in order to see it clearly
How I mindfully use writing craft
Why I persist
We must go to the source of writing in order to most effectively teach it. It seems to me, attitude and ultimately engagement, dwell here.
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