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Hi!
Are you ready to turn in your FINAL PROJECT???

When you're finished with your Digital Poem on Animoto, do the following:

1) Go to view your Animoto video
2) Click "EMBED" (button below your Animoto video when viewing)
3) COPY the CODE
4) PASTE that code in the COMMENT BOX below with your name included.


This will allow ME to DISPLAY YOUR Digital Poem on our class site @ --> Digital Poetry and will signify to me that you are DONE with your poem (no more revision needed). Please refer to the rubric to make sure you have completed all requirements! 

Thanks! I cannot WAIT to see what you have created!!

Ms. Pfautz
 
Hello Class!!
Today I got a link to this blog from a friend. I'd like you to read it quickly and think about it. Go to: "How To Steal Like an Artist (and 9 Other Things Nobody Told ME)"

There were two parts that have stuck with me as a writer: 
1) This quote: "We were kids without fathers…so we found our fathers on wax and on the streets and in history, and in a way, that was a gift. We got to pick and choose the ancestors who would inspire the world we were going to make for ourselves…Our fathers were gone, usually because they just bounced, but we took their old records and used them to build something fresh." -Jay-Z, 

2) "Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal; bad poets deface what they take, and good poets make it into something better, or at least something different. The good poet welds his theft into a whole of feeling which is unique, utterly different from that from which it was torn; the bad poet throws it into something which has no cohesion. A good poet will usually borrow from authors remote in time, or alien in language, or diverse in interest."— T.S. Eliot, 1920

Think about yourself as an artist. Is anything NEW? Can we create new forms that haven't been created yet?

I would LOVE to hear your thoughts. 

Hope you had a great weekend!
Ms. Pfautz


 
Hello Writers -
Lately I've been asking myself the question, "Why write?" "What does it do for ME as a person? As a human being?" "What does my writing 'do' for/to others?" (I know. That was more than one question. My questions always come in threes...) As I think about these questions, I notice that I'm feeling about these questions more than thinking. My emotions undestand the importance of writing. Since we began this exploration into writing short fiction, I have noticed it in you too. You are seeming more confident and introspective (thoughtful about yourself). I've noticed shifts and movements in you. So. I want to ask you this question - What does writing DO for you?

Here's a favorite quote of mine by Anne Lamott from her book Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life:

"We write to expose the unexposed. If there is one door in the castle you have been told not to go through, you must. The writer's job is to turn the unspeakable into words - not just into any words, but if we can, into rhythm and blues."

I have been feeling badly lately about how little I write. My journal gets an entry every few days, but I haven't written a short story in a long, long time. I want to write a story that is more than words...more than music even. Writing something good gives me such a sense to accomplishment. It causes me to look at the world more deeply. It helps me see myself more clearly. What about you? What is writing doing for you?

 
Hello Students -
Here is a place for you to REFLECT on your reading, writing, and thinking. I know I ask you to reflect often in my class, but reflection is a VITALLY important part of your development as a human being. The ability to reflect on yourself is what makes you HUMAN!! Relish the process!!

Here's some questions to guide your REFLECTIONS:
REFLECTION QUESTIONS

How did the strategy of ________________________ help you as a WRITER? Explain.

What have you learned about yourself as a writer or a reader today?

Think about a time when you struggled today, either as a reader or a writer. What strategy(ies) did you use to help you? Explain how it helped.

Celebrate a success you had as a reader/writer today. 

Share/reflect on a challenge you had as a reader/writer today.

Think about one of the mentor texts you read this week. How did this mentor text help you as a writer? Or, how did the author engage you as a reader? Be specific.

Think about one of the stories you read by someone else today. How did the author engage you as a reader?      

What are your needs as a writer?

Where
do you feel drawn to next as a writer? What are you going to write about next?



 
Hello Again!

Me here. I want to start out this blog by saying that I love figurative language like I love music. They are the same in my mind. Music speaks the way a great sentence or phrases does. Right? Anyone agree? 

I'd like you to share here your favorite example of figurative language, either written by YOU or SOMEONE ELSE. 

I'll start. My friend just got a poem published and I think it's a sweet little simile.
"I ride up Chiques Hill –
Long, curvy and steep with as much shoulder as a worm."


 
Hello!
So we had a "week off" for the PSSA tests, but now we are back! I totally missed class. I'm ready to start writing again and getting these short stories off the ground. I feel like we've been a bit stuck lately, and I'm ready for what's next. 

Here's your question (s?)--> Where are you at in your story? Where do you want to be? What's next for you as a writer? W

I honestly can't believe how much I've seen you grow as writers, in tiny ways but also enormous ways. I'm really proud of you. You've already exceeded my expectations. 

Have fun as writers this week! 

Ms. P
 
The writer must believe that what he is doing is the most important thing in the world. And he must hold to this illusion even when he knows it is not true. -John Steinbeck

Hello Writers!
I'm so proud of all of you for the work you have done over the past week! Thank you!

This quote by John Steinbeck made me think about you and the work you are doing. Your work is important. Your growth as writers, readers, and thinkers is important. I want to start out our blog by celebrating you. What do you feel has been your greatest success as a writer, reader, or thinker the few weeks? Why have you been so successful?

I cannot wait to read your thoughts and reflections. 

Cheers, Ms. Pfautz
 
Um...so I like words. I'm a huge nerd about books, language, journaling, records (do you guys know what a record is?), old dishes, guitars, comic books, art house films, vintage jewelry, stories that get passed down, cooking with weird recipes, making stuff up, Jadite (I'll show you some time). The list goes on... 


Why? You might ask, am I telling you this? Because I believe that, in part, we are defined by what we like...by the things we enjoy. I want to know what you like, because you're interesting. Everyone is a nerd. And nerds are interesting.


What about you? What are you a huge nerd about? What are those things that make you totally geek out, even if everyone around you looks quizzically at you? I shared, right? You can too!


Sweet!
Ms. P