My goal is to teach a secondary level creative writing program. I think that the value placed on the creative elements of writing is not keeping pace with the expressive mediums available to our modern society. The blogosphere, the twitterverse, and the various other forums, newsgroups, and comment sections of the internet offer uncountable settings for fiction, poetry, memoir, advice, and more. The abilities to critically assess, appreciate, and understand a text are incredibly valuable, but with no well-crafted texts to work with, those skills atrophy. The digital world of words is infinitely broad, but its landscape is sparsely lit by few and far between lighthouses of heartfelt good writing.
I plan on helping students develop the tools needed to write well, to communicate effectively with the written word. And the vast majority of that communication, for them, will take place online, and with digital tools. Future writers will not only need to understand how different expressive techniques can be used to generate content that expresses their thoughts, experiences and beliefs, but will also need to have an understanding of the rules of conduct when creating and posting that content online. They will need to know the formatting techniques necessary to prepare a document that will be part of a website. They will need to know what can be done with cloud-based word processors, vs. what can best be done on a hard-drive based program.
And I, as their teacher, will be using any and all tools available to me to develop those skills. I will be using spreadsheets to teach vocabulary, I’ll be using presentation tools to share texts with the class. I’ll be using web-based video programs to give the students a venue to share their work with the world. I’m hoping to use tablet PCs to create a peer-review environment that gives student reviewers the tools they need to comment on a piece of writing, but preserves the “face-to-faceness” of an old-school writing workshop. It will be my responsibility to teach students how to protect their writing online, and how to recognize what digital media is available for them to incorporate in their own work, and what is not.
Much of this territory is just now being explored in English classrooms, and it makes for an exciting, frustrating, and, above all, open, frontier for young writers (and teachers of young writers.) In developing the best way to teach these skills, I’ll be modeling them to students as well.
The most challenging part may be addressing the fact that, in two or three years, many of the terms and tools I’m describing here and now will be passé at best, and more than likely completely obsolete. I will be constantly given opportunities to explore new tools, new norms, and new venues. With any luck, my students will be exploring them with me, and together we’ll find ways to fill them with poetry. Poetry and spreadsheets.
Pax and Petra,
Ben Geile