[As a member of my school’s Leadership Team, I have volunteered to facilitate a monthly book study using the text Children Want to Write: Donald Graves and the Revolution in Children’s Writing. This is one entry in an intended series devoted to reflections, musings, and captured wisdom that results from our book study readings and discussions. See how it started here.]
The DVD that
accompanies Children Want to Write is a treasure trove of additional
fodder for reflective teachers. When introducing the reading assignment for our
session (chapters 1 & 2), I prepared colleagues to expect the featured
video for chapter 2, “The Mother of the Story,” to be part of our discussion.
Together we viewed the clip in which one young writer, Debbie, articulates what
writing is really about—for her.
During the group
viewing, I asked colleagues to watch the video specifically to identify
characteristics of this student that made her a writer. The interview Lucy
Calkins conducts with Debbie emphasizes her identity as a writer. She describes
her ownership of her writing, expressing how she is in control of the choices
and decisions related to her work. While she honors the influence of others in
her writing community, she knows she is ultimately the decision-maker, or “the
mother of the story.”
In the resulting
conversation, my colleagues and I reflected on the conditions that are
currently in place in our writing workshops, and we dreamed aloud of what we
would like to see and do in order to promote such self-awareness and high
levels of reflection in our own students. We want to nurture our students
towards the development of their own writing identities.
Debbie’s
confidence in describing herself as a writer and her relationship to her
writing is evidence of the active role she assumed as a writer. She showed deep
investment in her writing and owned her ideas. She was comfortable taking
chances, and changing her mind or standing her ground. She
recognized an intrinsic reward in writing.
Comparatively, I
frequently encounter students who are more passive, operating from a position
in which writing is something done “to” them, given as an assignment or a
consequence. Risk taking weighs them down, and fear of having nothing
"good enough" to write paralyzes them from the start. The act of
writing is not yet internalized and ownership of the writing is not yet
actualized.
How do we make
the shift?
I take hints at
ways to begin from Graves’ wisdom about writers and vulnerability and value.
Students need
opportunities to see themselves in the role of a writer. I need to empower them with words and wide-reading experiences,
and I need to gift them with time. I can instill this idea by calling them
writers, and reminding them they are. I can involve them in partnerships with
other writers, including myself, stretching their potential as developing
writers. I can create ways to share and celebrate their writing.
Students need to
experience that they have ideas worth thinking, exploring, and sharing through
writing. I need to
validate that their ideas have worth. I can cheerlead their efforts, honor the
personal nature of their work, and recognize the risk that is involved. I can
help students increase their comfort with vulnerability by being a vulnerable
writer myself.
Students need to
find acceptance, through discovery, that writing is often imperfect, sometimes
unfinished, unpublished, and/or private and not shared with a wider audience. I
can de-emphasize final drafts and publishing. I can model more exploratory
writing and be an example of a writer who doesn’t perfect every piece I begin.
I can to broaden students’ perception of what writing is.
Debbie was a writer. By accepting vulnerability and
internalizing the value of her written work, Debbie developed her identity as a
writer. With some intentional choices to promote these habits in our writing
workshop, so can our students.
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