Living Life Twice- Most Popular Posts of 2024
Here are five of the most popular Living Life Twice posts for 2024. Thank you for your continuing support and interest in teaching writing and all it entails. Here's a chance to reconnect with writing ideas. Ideas you can easily carry forward into 2025. Just click the blue link...
Advice and Inspiration For Young Writers
After a lifetime engaged in a writing life as both teacher and writer/poet, I offer the following advice to young and inexperienced writers. Advice about developing good writing habits and thinking about your writing in ways that deliver some essential energy to continue writing. May these words prove of value to you and you approach writing eagerly to write what matters, striving to build confidence and experience as teachers, students and authors.
Emotional Responses To Writing
Emotional response is critically important in writing. It’s part of the total package. Our emotional responses manifest themselves in many ways. Sometimes it's the writer. Sometimes it's the writing. Great writing evokes an emotional response from the reader, such is its power. Sometimes it's the way writing is taught that stirs emotion. In this article I find myself reflecting upon my responses to a number of common classroom writing scenarios.
The Teacher And The Writer's Notebook
If, for some reason you are experiencing trouble on the writing launch pad, maybe these ideas might prompt your thinking. They may spark a connection to a topic/idea you feel strongly about; -enough to get the pen moving across the page...
Creating classrooms that hum with rich conversation about what is important to write about for each individual writer is a most worthy pursuit in the early days and weeks of a new school year. It sets the tone and the expectation. It will assist both you and your young writers.
The Role Of Storytelling In The Writing Classroom
Stories begin to loom large in the lives of young writers. It is therefore important to nurture this growing sense of story while simultaneously creating opportunities for them to create their very own -real, imagined or blended.
Preserving Integrity Around The Writer's Notebook In The Classroom
Writer Joan Didion famously said our (writer’s) notebooks give us away. We are revealed by the contents. Our notebooks are a place to collect, then take those collected items and use them to spark further original writing. As Ralph Fletcher, writer and educator reminds us, we use our notebooks to breathe in (collect) and breathe out (generate).
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