In a class on the Essay at Bread Loaf, Shirley Brice-Heath
said that reading and writing are leisure activities. She said this in explanation of why so many writers in the
19th century, or any other time period, were upper middle class
and/or wealthy. It takes time to
read and time to write, one can’t be working all hours on the factory floor if
one is going to read and write.
Over time I have hacked away at the “stuff” I teach that takes up the
time of the classroom; I have abandoned entire beloved lesson plans and units
because they ate into the time my students have to read and write. My students live busy complex
lives. They work at their jobs,
often more than one, they have many classes in addition to mine and some of
them have babies that they have to take care of as well. So I schedule huge blocks of time to
read and write in class everyday.
It is not a “Read-in” Friday, or “let’s write an in-class essay today”,
but every day we are reading and writing together and alone. It is what is expected in my
class. Over time the students come
to expect the time they have to read and write and become irritable when they
don’t get that time because of scheduled and unscheduled administrative
dictates. The time to read and
write is important, because it is time the students don’t normally get. It is ironic, as Randy Bomer pointed
out, that we banish students committing acts of literacy from the classroom in
order to provide time for state test prep, drill and bundle tests; activities
which teach the students to hate reading and writing. Maybe not so ironic as criminal.
(November 2011)
1 comments:
thanks for protecting the joy of reading and writing for young people :)
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