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Young Woman At Work

A Writing Teacher Finds Her Voice

This post by 起点传媒member Nancy Sommers was first shared in 2015.听

In the September 2015听, Nancy Sommers shares the double-life of a writer and ELA teacher in and she offers this insight about voice:

 

Over the years as my teaching and writing narratives intertwined, I pulled up my socks and worked across drafts, seeking a voice that could push against the either/or categories of being personal or being academic.

Voice is that elusive category we talk about with students鈥斺渇ind your voice,鈥 we urge, as if they left it somewhere, in a dresser drawer, perhaps, as if they could purchase it on Amazon. But there is no lost and found drawer for voice, no way to shop for it, or stumble upon it. It is something you have to write your way into, something that takes practice and play, attempt after attempt, as you arrange the alphabet into comfortable shapes and sounds, listening for your own idiosyncratic take on the world.

I tell my students they can鈥檛 park their voice at the college gates; they can鈥檛 write as if they鈥檙e wearing someone else鈥檚 socks. I, too, had to learn that I couldn鈥檛 write in the meek voice of a girl who winds bobbins, nor in the strident voice of a feminist who storms the woodworking shop.

Part and parcel of who I am in the world is a teacher, and I want to write as I have come to teach: setting out on a quest, with leaps of faith and good humor, attempting, as essayists do, to figure something out, and always, always imagining an audience on the other end.

See also  Removing Shame and Embarrassment from Grammar Instruction

 

 

Nancy Sommers, lead author of the Diana Hacker handbooks (A Writer鈥檚 Reference, Rules for Writers, etc.), teaches writing and mentors new writing teachers at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

 

 

 

 

 

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