Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Writing is My Elixir by Fran Haley



I am a writer.


Which means, essentially, that I am an alchemist of words, continually experimenting with ways to convey ideas and inspiration. I write first as a revelation to myself. Once I have some substance on the page, once an idea solidifies, I refine the words repeatedly for a desired effect on readers. This is a point I emphasize to students when my teaching colleagues invite me into their classrooms: “Writing is a message. It involves a sender and a receiver. Your job, as the writer, is to make your reader think and feel what you think and feel.”

As I model for students and teachers, from ideas to final drafts, I involve them in the process. They help me make artistic choices—topic, word choices, sometimes form. They become invested. In fourth grade last week I modeled how poets get ideas from objects, photographs, art, wonder, and relationships (not just between humans, but, say, the relationship of the moon to oceans and tides). I shared my own ideas in these categories and students chose an object as the basis of a poem for me to write: An old tonic bottle I found partially buried in the dirt of what was once my grandfather’s childhood farm. “Write a rhyming poem,” said the students, with glee.

So, before their very eyes, I combined those ingredients: A bottle, a format, emotion, a need to make a vital connection to readers … stirring, refining …

Only as I began writing this post with that little bottle in mind did it occur to me that writing is my elixir. Not a meaningless formula that I hawk to achieve my own ends, but one of authentic, lifelong power.  Once the students get a taste of the real thing, they desire it forever.

As I do.


Fran Haley is a K-12 English Language Arts educator currently serving as a K-5 literacy coach. Writing is her favorite thing to do and to teach; she loves helping others of all ages grow to love writing. She facilitates writing workshop training for teachers in her district and authors the blog Lit Bits and Pieces: Snippets of Learning and Life. Connect with Fran on Twitter: @fahaley.

2 comments:

  1. Your post -- and YOU! -- are magical! Thanks for sharing your words here today, Fran.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks so much, Jen. Sharing this is pure joy. Making the magic is, as we know, a lot of hard work, but to experience all the parts and pieces coming together is magical, indeed. Incredibly powerful. I tell the students that writing is the closest thing there is to magic - the pencil is the wand.

    ReplyDelete

Feedback is the food that feeds a writer's soul. Please leave a few words for our guest bloggers to let them know you stopped by.

Write for Us!

The #TeachWrite Twitter Chat Blog is dedicated to providing a space for our community to connect and share their voices about writing and teaching writing. We are looking for guest bloggers who would like to blog on topics related to being a teacher-writer. Educators and writers of all levels are invited to join us in this space. More information can be found here.