Blog Entry 1 January 25, 2013
Writing as Doing, Saying, and Being?
Currently, most of my writing is
connected to my teaching: writing prompts, reflections, models. As much as I would like to write, I find I
don’t really have the motivation and focus required to sit down and write after
teaching and all that goes with it. As
we discussed in class, most of what I’ve learned about writing I’ve learned in
order to teach, either through teacher training or independent reading and
research. As a student I had very
little writing instruction. My school
writing consisted of elementary school book reports, response to literature in
high school, and MLA documentation in college.
I did come up with one memory of a writing assignment in eighth grade,
though, that I think may be relevant to this class.
Write about your most
embarrassing moment. My current eighth
grade students might not have a problem with this assignment, but I thought it
was bizarre. I went to a Catholic school
in the seventies. There was no talking
in the halls, separate gym classes for boys and girls, and strict tracking: you
were an A, B, or C student. In class, you wrote down what the nuns told you to
write, memorized it, and regurgitated it back to them. This was not a creative or open
environment. I was a good student, I
even enjoyed diagramming sentences, but there was no way I was going to open
myself up to potential ridicule from classmates and teachers by telling them
about something embarrassing. I copied a
story out of a teen magazine about a girl who confused Yogi Bear with Yogi
Berra. Done. I got a good grade and went completely
unnoticed. Mission accomplished.
Not everyone had the same
reaction, though. A boy in the class,
Alex, wrote a very funny story about diving into a lake and losing his bathing
suit. Sister Ann Jerome had him read it
in class and even laughed when he wrote about “retrieving the lost item.” That was shocking because I’m pretty sure
that no one had ever seen her smile before.
So why would one student embrace that assignment, and one avoid it? Clearly it had to do with factors beyond the
writing. Alex (now my husband of twenty
years) was outgoing and friendly. He had
gone to the school since first grade, lived in the neighborhood, and was completely
comfortable in his environment. I had
transferred from public school, lived in a fairly distant neighborhood, and was
never quite comfortable in any environment.
The underlying emotional aspects of writing became crystal clear to me
as I thought about the dynamics of personality, temperament, and circumstances
involved in our distinctive responses to this prompt. Although this was supposed to be a “creative”
writing assignment, it did not inspire creativity in me. In fact, I was as uncreative in my response
as possible because I was so uncomfortable with the topic. I simply gave the teacher what I thought she
wanted and moved on, quickly. Actually,
figuring out what the teacher wanted became my primary goal in completing
writing assignments and it worked pretty well for me. So while I’m still not quite clear about what
Writing as Saying, Doing, and Being means, perhaps it has something to do with
the reasons two writers in the same class might approach the same assignment so
differently, and figuring out what the writer wants to say as opposed to what
the teacher wants to hear.