|
      
|
May 20, 2002
Celebration Reading highlights the work of young writers
By Ann M. Gibb
They've polished their prose and published their poems, so now the young authors
are ready to share their writing publicly at the Celebration Reading. This event
is the annual culmination of the Creative Writing in the Schools program, which places
UCSC students, trained to teach creative writing workshops, in local secondary schools.
 |
| From left, Charles Atkinson, director UCSC Creative Writing in the Schools program,
with intern Brent Hagen, Santa Cruz High School English teacher Julie Minnis, and
Tom Marshall, founder of the Creative Writing in the Schools programs at UCSC and
Cabrillo College. Hagen is teaching poetry workshops in Minnis's class this quarter.
Photo: Ann M. Gibb. |
The Celebration Reading will be held on May 26 from 2 to 5 p.m. in Room 105, Oakes
College. It is free and open to the public.
"The most important goal of Creative Writing in the Schools is to shift the
attitude of young students from writing as a chore to writing as an expression of
what matters to them," said Charles Atkinson, a lecturer in creative writing
at UCSC who has led the Creative Writing in the Schools program for two years. "And
it works. If you give undergraduates a chance to share their own passion for writing
with younger students, that passion is infectious."
More than 3,000 kindergarten through 12th-grade students have participated in the
Creative Writing in the Schools program since it began at UCSC six years ago under
the leadership of Tom Marshall, English instructor at Cabrillo College, who at that
time was a lecturer in literature at UCSC.
He has launched a Creative Writing in the Schools program at Cabrillo as well.
This year the combined programs will serve about 850 students in more than 30 classrooms
across three counties.
As Marshall gradually expanded Creative Writing in the Schools, he secured funding
from UCSC's Educational Partnership Center to target schools serving low-income,
at-risk student populations. Schools that do not offer a creative writing class are
a top priority for the program.
"I've learned how challenging it is to establish a program," said Marshall.
"But if I step back and look back at the whole picture, it's wonderful what
Cabrillo and UCSC have been able to do."
When Atkinson took over as faculty director for the program at UCSC, he built on
Marshall's experience. The program begins during the fall quarter, when Atkinson
screens prospective participants through an application process. "I look particularly
for students who demonstrate the potential to be good teachers," said Atkinson.
"They don't have to be creative writing majors, though many are, and most are
juniors and seniors." This year 18 students were chosen for UCSC's program.
The selected students take a winter-quarter class with Atkinson, learning to design
and present creative writing lessons, practice teaching with their classmates, and
provide feedback to each other. The students, now dubbed interns to distinguish them
from the middle and high school students they will teach, begin their school placements
in spring quarter.
"The day before the first time I taught, I was very nervous," said Brent
Hagen, a creative writing intern who is a junior majoring in literature with a minor
in education. "But once I was in there, the kids were awesome."
Interns ordinarily teach two workshops a week, always in the presence of the classroom
teacher. Atkinson observes the interns at least twice during the quarter, and they
meet as a class weekly to debrief and share what they are learning. By the end of
the quarter, each intern's classes will have completed an anthology of writings,
from which selected students will share at the Celebration Reading.
"It's really great to see the kids have a new relationship with writing,"
said Hagen. "I was pretty sure I wanted to be a teacher, but being in the Creative
Writing in the Schools program has solidified that decision for me." Approximately
a quarter of the interns who participated in the program last year are now teaching
in public schools.
"We get these middle and high school students to share their lives on paper,
and it's moving to see the candor and wisdom that comes through in their writing,"
said Atkinson. "This program can be life changing for both sets of students."
For more information on the Celebration Reading, call (831) 459-2155.
Return to Front Page
|
 |