On Teaching Children to Write
Writing stories--and how one learns to do it--is so elusive.
Can anyone explain the actual process of learning to write... or fully
understand how a child--how anyone, really--finds words and manages to
put them down on paper?
If you followed the postings at Wordswimmer over the summer, you know
that I spent part of July and August at the local library teaching
children (ages 7 to 12) how to write stories while seeking answers to
these questions.
And last month I returned to the library to offer another workshop,
hoping to help young writers step into the water so they can swim into
their own stories.
These workshops with the children have taught me that the success of
most workshops depends largely on whether a teacher is able to create
a safe space, a place where writers, whether children or adults, feel
safe to explore their imaginations and make mistakes.
This method of teaching takes great patience and sensitivity to each
student's passions and interests. And it requires a willingness to let
each student follow his or her heart wherever it wants to go... rather
than insist that the student follow the teacher's plan for the day.
This kind of teaching also demands a willingness (on the part of the
teacher and student) to suspend critical assessments, to simply let
words flow onto paper. Suspending critical judgment means not worrying
about proper punctuation or strict rules of grammar or spelling or
paragraphing... at least in the beginning... so that nothing gets in
the way of the imagination. Such a non-critical approach, I've found,
enables writers--young and old--to dive unrestrained into the sea of
their imagination and freely reproduce the scenes that they discover
there.
As I spent time with the children during our summer workshops, I
noticed how each child brought his or her own set of experiences to
the exercises. By this I mean each child lived a different life, with
different expectations and different experiences, and each child held
onto the memories of his or her experiences in different ways...not
just holding on to pictures or scenes stored in memory but to
emotions--and a full panoply of senses (taste, smell, sight, hearing,
touch)--that enriched the child's memory and understanding about life
and what it felt like to be human.
Learning to write stories means, on the deepest level, I think,
learning how to empathize with one's fellow human beings. To do this,
writers must learn how to sort through their own memories, emotions,
senses, and experiences, and then learn how to translate their
emotions into the emotions and experiences of their characters.
But it also means learning that his or her view of the world is
slightly slanted. That is, writers need to understand that they see
the world in their own unique way, differently from anyone else's way
of looking at the world. It's each writer's unique viewpoint, after
all--the way he or she understands the world--that will draw a reader
into his or her stories.
Without such a slant, without the perspective of the author reflected
in the narrative voice and in the details that voice selects to put on
the page, there is no story... because there is no narrator with whom
the reader can relate.
In our sessions this past summer, some children wrote in their
journals with ease and had no trouble finding words or putting them
down on paper; their imaginations seemed to overflow, and they wrote
quickly, as fast as ideas popped into their heads. Others wrote
extremely slowly, not necessarily because their imaginations were less
full, but, perhaps, because they found it more difficult to translate
the pictures in their minds into words.
I had to remind myself that speed wasn't an accurate indicator of
skill or talent. It was only an indicator of how fast a child could
put words down on paper. No matter how fast or slow a child would
write a story, I couldn't predict when or how skill or talent might be
revealed in each child's work. Often, the two elements appeared in
different amounts at different times during the process. In the end, I
was less interested in skill or talent anyway and more interested in
whether the children were enjoying the chance to explore and discover
new worlds inside themselves and the stories that they uncovered
there.
When I started these workshops, I hadn't expected that teaching
children to write might be as mysterious as writing itself. Just as a
writer can't predict how a story will end, I couldn't predict which
child would find a story and which child wouldn't, who might put words
in a compelling order, who might be left staring at a blank page. The
process itself was, for the most part, out of my hands and in the
hands of the children.
What I learned as a result of the workshops--and what I hope I can
remember in the coming months--was that many factors contribute to a
child's success as a writer: desire; unwillingness to give up; love of
words; devotion to stories, and, most of all, that unfathomable
quality--a writer's spirit--or the inner force that propels writers
through the world toward whatever goals they may set for themselves.
Maybe what some people mean when they say you can't teach writing is:
you can't teach spirit; you can only hope to kindle and nurture it.
By the end of the sessions, I came away with a much deeper respect for
the difficulty each of us --beginning writers and more experienced
writers alike--goes through to get words on paper. No one who embarks
on this journey in search of words and stories is spared the struggle
of trying to get the words down.
But teaching children about the process of writing also taught me to
trust the process more fully. And it taught me to have greater faith
in the invisible source of all stories, the source out of which our
stories emerge.... and where we'll find more stories waiting for us,
if only we--like the children--can summon the courage to dive in.
To read earlier posts about my experience teaching children to write,
visit:
http://wordswimmer.blogspot.com/2007/08/walking-across-sand.html
http://wordswimmer.blogspot.com/2007/08/swimming-with-maps.html
http://wordswimmer.blogspot.com/2007/07/rarely-swimming-in-straight-li
ne.html
http://wordswimmer.blogspot.com/2007/06/teaching-young-swimmers.html
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