Teaching "kids" to write is very different from refining language to its best. Certainly, beginning writers need to feel a sense of fluency and momentum, an opportunity to say something that appeals or matters to them. However, one of the major differences between poetry, let's say, written by earnest teenagers and that of accomplished poets is in their language, not only in the Aristotle-approved metaphor-making but also in revelations of how language works. "Clarity" and "meaning," in and of themselves, can too readily become simplistic opinion; skilled attention to the way sentences and words actually work will always assist a writer toward saying more than s/he thought at first. It is no disrespect to a student's ideas or feelings to give what I consider a high compliment, "You make good sentences."
Sun Jan 30 2011 07:54:20 GMT-0500 (Eastern Standard Time)
We are a group of super sexy literary ninjas who fight ignorance and l33t speak with nothing but our wit and a red pen. Answering only to Mitzi, King Josh or anyone with "Dr." before his/her name, we roam around UWG's quad, constantly explaining why we're the teacher, even though "Banweb says McFarland".
robert hill (toguf) wrote:
Teaching "kids" to write is very different from refining language to its best. Certainly, beginning writers need to feel a sense of fluency and momentum, an opportunity to say something that appeals or matters to them. However, one of the major differences between poetry, let's say, written by earnest teenagers and that of accomplished poets is in their language, not only in the Aristotle-approved metaphor-making but also in revelations of how language works. "Clarity" and "meaning," in and of themselves, can too readily become simplistic opinion; skilled attention to the way sentences and words actually work will always assist a writer toward saying more than s/he thought at first. It is no disrespect to a student's ideas or feelings to give what I consider a high compliment, "You make good sentences."
Sun Jan 30 2011 07:54:20 GMT-0500 (Eastern Standard Time)