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How Creative Writing Can Increase Students’ Resilience [greatergood.berkeley.edu]

 

Many of my seventh-grade students do not arrive at school ready to learn. Their families often face financial hardship and live in cramped quarters, which makes it difficult to focus on homework. The responsibility for cooking and taking care of younger siblings while parents work often falls on these twelve year olds’ small shoulders. Domestic violence and abuse are also not uncommon.

To help traumatized students overcome their personal and academic challenges, one of our first jobs as teachers is to build a sense of community. We need to communicate that we care and that we welcome them into the classroom just as they are. One of the best ways I’ve found to connect with my students, while also nurturing their reading and writing skills, is through creative writing.

For the past three years, I’ve invited students in my English Language Development (ELD) classes to observe their thoughts, sit with their emotions, and offer themselves and each other compassion through writing and sharing about their struggles. Creating a safe, respectful environment in which students’ stories matter invites the disengaged, the hopeless, and the numb to open up. Students realize that nobody is perfect and nobody’s life is perfect. In this kind of classroom community, they can take the necessary risks in order to learn, and they become more resilient when they stumble.

[For more on this story by LAURA BEAN, go to https://greatergood.berkeley.e..._students_resilience]

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I've been a creative writer for the past 4 decades. I've always believed that I HAVE to write, that writing nearly everyday was not a choice. I would have to say that every one of my writings - thousands of articles and over a dozen books - was a response to and a cure for anxiety and / or depression experienced from activated early trauma. The inspiration, inner peace and sense of core-satisfaction I derive from writing has been a life-saver and a joy bringer. It's great to know that there is something universal happening here.  Perhaps that is why so many of our greatest creative artists carried some of the deepest inner pain-patterns they attempted to medicate to their detriment, when they did not turn to their creative passion for the sense of solution and redemption they needed.  

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