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Igniting a love of words and worlds.

Teaching, Travel, Writing

New Site!

As I begin to query for Improbable Girl, I decided it was time to make an author site.  I feel like I have no idea what I’m doing, which is mostly true.  My built in IT department, also known as my husband, is busy writing math textbooks and has pushed me out of the nest to muddle through myself.

I just imported my old Writer, Reader, Teacher, Spy blog posts and a few of them have some issues with pictures.  I’ll try to get those fixed over the coming weeks.

Thanks for stopping by.  These blog posts will showcase the many hats I wear, so it will be a mixed bag.  I hope you enjoy!

Teaching

Bringing Literature to Life with a Maker Space

Today I am presenting the session “Bringing Literature to Life with a Maker Space” at the TAIS Tech conference.  Caitlin McLemore, our educational technology specialist at Harpeth Hall is my co-presenter.

Here is the movie I made of the project with WeVideo.

Here are is our presentation:

Teaching, Writing

What I’m reading right now

I sent out a query to an agency this week that was done through a form on a website rather than through email.  (Side note: This seems to be a growing trend for agencies, and I bet it helps them to categorize, sort and log their queries.  I predict it will be more common for agencies to go this route.)  As part of the submission form, I was asked to name the most recent book I read.

I think that’s a great question and I thought it would be worthwhile to share my answer.

If I was being totally honest, the most recent book I read was Biscuit Loves the Library by Alyssa Satin Capucilli, which is one of the books my four-year-old checked out of the library last weekend.  But, I am not sure that is what the question was really asking.   What I wrote was Modern Romance by Aziz Ansari with Eric Klinenberg.

There is a unique pleasure to reading a book after my toddlers have gone to sleep.  In this photo, I’m also clearly reading rather than folding those baskets of laundry that are on the right edge of the frame.  I’ve got my priorities straight.

But sometimes it is too good to wait for after their bedtimes, so I read during bathtime!

I absolutely loved it.  Non-fiction has been appealing to me lately, but I love Aziz’s voice and humor.  Reading it was also a trip down memory lane to my single days in New York.  I did online dating and speed dating, and I remember well what that was like.  Interesting and really funny, this one had me giggling in the evenings.  In addition, I’ve been gravitating towards non-fiction to avoid losing my own voice in my writing.  Like picking up an accent, sometimes I find that whatever fiction I’m reading tends to influence my own writing.  It’s tricky to balance inspiration with my own individuality.  
The other books I am currently knee-deep in are these two:
Children’s Writer’s & Illustrator’s Market 2016, a gift from my mother-in-law for Christmas.  
I’ve been reading through all of the agent, publisher, and magazine listings.  There are also very interesting articles and interviews.  A lot of this is reiterating what I learned at the Mid-South SCBWI conference, but it’s nice to have this reference text.  

And Self-Editing for Fiction Writers.  (Again, notice the jammies.  I’m in the After-The-Toddlers-Are-Asleep Writing and Reading Club.)

I read Self-Editing for Fiction Writers once through, and now I am re-reading it and taking notes and making one giant checklist.  Each of the 12 chapters ends with a self-editing checklist.  I am putting that all on one document and adding my notes and highlights from each chapter.  It’s really a great book, with examples, clear explanations, exercises and checklists.  I read it in December, between finishing the third draft of my novel and starting the fourth.  My hope is to start using the checklists and my notes to tackle my fourth draft next week.

Teaching, Writing

Thesis and outline workshop

Both my 10th grade classes and my 9th grade classes are working on thesis statements and outlines for their upcoming essays–on The Secret Life of Bees for 9th graders, and Life of Pi for 10th graders.

The first stage in the process is a Graffiti Wall.  I have them tape their exploratory paragraphs and quotes onto a large sheet of paper.  Silently, students rotate to the other papers and leave feedback.

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Then, they work on writing a few thesis statement attempts for 10 minutes.  They pick their favorite and write it on the white boards, without a name.  They then pair up and rotate through the statements leaving feedback.

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The feedback is valuable, but giving feedback and evaluating the work of others is equally valuable.  It reminds them there are many different topics and arguments and they aren’t chasing the one, perfect topic.

I also want to make writing less lonely and emphasize the power and potential of collaboration in the writing process.  I am a member of a few writing groups, and they are essential to development and growth.

Teaching

Meet the teacher presentations

Below are the presentations I gave at Meet the Teacher night.  I did not get to the final slides about confidence because I ran out of time.  The first presentation was for my 9th grade parents, and the second is my honors sophomores.

*You have to press the play button in the bottom left corner.  The slides automatically advance every 10 seconds.  You can pause the presentation or manually advance or rewind.

English I:


Honors English II:

Teaching

Meet the Teacher

Tonight is Meet the Teacher night at my school.  I will meet with my advisee’s parents and then I will have 8 minutes with the parents of each of my classes.  It is a whirlwind and definitely a high stress evening, but it is always lovely to meet the parents.  I teach all day (with a lunch meeting thrown in) then my husband (who also teaches at the same school) and I will rush home, get the kids from day care, get them fed, and then hand it off to the babysitter.  Back to school to spruce up the room and prepare to meet the parents.

I wanted to share with you the letter of introduction I wrote to my students this year.  I’ve done this every year and it is one of my favorite rituals.  As you will see, students write me a letter back.  I keep these letters and return them right before they graduate.  It’s a nice time capsule.


August 19, 2015
Dear Students,
As I was getting dressed last week, a stray sticky note fluttered to the ground.  It must have come home stuffed in a pocket, only to be dumped onto my dresser with the loose change and paperclips, where it then it fell into my drawer.  The note was only about an inch square and it said—in my own handwriting— “We are all a work in progress.”  I often find notes like this with unlabeled phone numbers, or something someone said that I want to remember.  By the end of the year, there are a bunch of them littered across my desk and I guess this one hitched a ride.  It feels like kismet.  (Do you know that word? It means destiny or fate.)
Maybe I am reading into it, but the moment felt magical.  (BTW, I think it’s okay to read into things, but I’m an English teacher and that’s basically my job.)
So I wrote this letter in the dark.  My three year old son gets scared, so my husband and I take turns sitting with him in his room as he falls asleep.  And sometimes an idea you want to write about will not wait and I’m worried that scrolling through Facebook on my phone might make me forget that little sticky note.
Until that night, I wasn’t sure what I would write about in my ninth letter of introduction to my new students.  The letter wasn’t my own idea—I learned it from a professor at NYU (where I got my masters).  Write your students a letter, he told us.  Then have them write you one back.  I’ve done it ever since. 
So, hi.  I’m Mrs. Griswold and I am your English teacher.  This is my fifth year at Harpeth Hall and my husband also teaches here.  We have two kids, a dog, and 5 chickens.  We moved here from New York 4 years ago. 
I went to middle school in Mexico City, high school in Caracas, Venezuela and then college in Cleveland.  I spent my junior year living in London and then I lived in New York where I went to NYU and then taught.  I guess you could say that I am international work in progress.  I have tried out a lot of cities and now here I am.  As a result of all of my years living abroad, I speak Spanish fluently and Portuguese conversationally—as in I can only speak in present tense and my vocabulary isn’t awesome. 
The kismet part of the sticky note is that this was my work in progress summer.  Three years ago I decided that I wanted to try to write a novel.  I signed up for NaNoWriMo, National Novel Writing Month.  In 2012, for the month of November, I wrote about 1,700 words each day and at the end of the month I had 50,000 words.  It was hard work and I was so proud of myself.  I did it!  I was done. 
But my novel wasn’t really done.  I hadn’t finished telling the story, even with 50,000 words.  Then I read that I needed more like 80 or 100,0000 words.  (I am so glad I didn’t know that before I started.) 
So, I spent the next Winterim and summer writing more. 
Then I did it!  I reached 75,000 words.  Except I had only barely edited any of what I had written.  It was 75,000 words of first draft filled with typos and dead ends.  So, I started re-reading from the beginning and editing as I went along.  I thought writing the first 50,000 words was hard.  Editing a novel is even harder.   
I just wanted to be done.  The end, perfect book, someone publish it now. 
Another summer and Winterim and I reached the end of the second draft and thought, okay, maybe I am ready to send it to agents! 
But then I realized that one character’s backstory didn’t really work and it was sort of haunting me.  Not to mention that I had written the book from two different points of view, and I wasn’t sure if all the facts lined up.  I also got some feedback from a writing group that one of my two narrators was less compelling and interesting than the other.
There was also the problem of the timeline.  In addition to having two narrators, the novel bounces around in time and it isn’t chronological. 
Then came this summer.  I changed the verb tenses of my narrators and I really tried to hear the characters speaking in my mind.  I reordered all of my chapters chronologically, and started editing for event and plot clarity. 
As I did that, I decided that one of my characters, the one whose backstory felt a little wonky, would be a dancer and I started interviewing dancers.  I went to the School of the Nashville Ballet.  I watched a dance company rehearse.  I kept writing and editing.
I went to coffee shops and I wrote every day.  Hours of writing.  I would get into that magical zone that psychologists call Flow.  I would look up and three hours had whizzed by.
All along the process of writing this novel, I keep thinking that this summer, this Winterim, I’m going to finish the book.  But I keep learning that it is still a work in progress.  At this point, I can’t imagine it ever not being a work in progress. 
To give myself a break from my novel, which happens to be sort of sad in parts, I worked on a children’s book that I wrote in 2007.  I edited it, I sent it to friends for feedback, and then I sent it to agents that represent children’s books.  Out of 6 agents, I have received 2 rejections, and I’m super pumped.  To me, a rejection meant I was really a writer who was really trying to get a book published.  People who just dream about being a writer never get any rejection letters.  I know that on the other side of rejection is that magical Yes.
I remember thinking in high school that at some point I would just get it.  That all adults had reached some sort of finish line and were just hanging out in the victory tent.  I remember feeling like I had so much to work on and so far to go, but maybe someday I’d be done. 
Writing is reminding me that we are all constantly a work in progress.   
Just as important, however, I’m learning that we have to find ways to be a work in progress, to attempt big, grand, scary things in life—like, say, high school.  Anne Lamott, who wrote Bird by Bird, my favorite book about writing, says:
E.L. Doctorow said once said that “Writing a novel is like driving a car at night. You can see only as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.” You don’t have to see where you’re going, you don’t have to see your destination or everything you will pass along the way. You just have to see two or three feet ahead of you. This is right up there with the best advice on writing, or life, I have ever heard.
I’m so glad I took on the challenge to write a novel.  Even if it is a work in progress forever.  Even if it never gets published.  I stuck with it.  I’m learning to be patient.  I’m learning not to quit on myself. 
            Okay, your turn.  Write me a letter.  As long as it’s about you, it can be about anything you want.  Maybe something I said has got you thinking.  What are your works in progress?  What big mountain do you want to climb?  What did you do this summer?  Don’t feel like you have to answer these questions.  I just want to get to know you. 
Sincerely,


Mrs. Griswold