Tag Archives: creative writing

Renee Mell, Corte Madera School

Renee Mell, Corte Madera School

One month ago, I became a teacher, in the legitimate sense of the word, when I walked into a conference room in Santiago, Chile, and saw a group of business professionals waiting to learn English. We said hello and that marked the extent of the language we shared until I started teaching. Progress was about to become audible and visible and believable.

I learned what it meant to teach, in the purest sense of the word, 18 years ago in Mrs. Mell’s eighth grade advanced English classroom at Corte Madera School in Portola Valley, a small suburb of San Francisco or San Jose, depending on how you look at the map. Progress may have been less literal during any given hour of instruction, but by the end of the year, I was still able to speak an entirely new language.

At the time, I already loved to read. I already had an idea that I could find something in books by L.M. Montgomery, Judy Blume, Christopher Pike, and V.C. Andrews that I couldn’t find in real life. What I didn’t yet know was that there was a way to critically think about and discuss books and real life in such a way that we as readers could articulate the connections we sensed were there all along. Mrs. Mell would change that.

Read full storyComments { 1 }

Kristin Lauer, Fordham University Lincoln Center

Kristin Lauer, Fordham University Lincoln Center

I dreamed of being a writer since I was in second grade, but it wasn’t until I took my first class with Kristin Lauer that I fell in love with writing itself.

She was my first and best creative writing teacher in college and was endlessly inventive in her choice of assignments. But more than that, she was a model for how I would teach when I entered academia for a while years later. She did not believe in pointing out everything that was wrong with your work, in bullying you like a coach, in making you tough because ”the world is tough.”

Her approach was through humor and encouragement. She worked from the inside out of your story or sketch, making you feel like she was communing with it, and with you.

She said to me more than once that I’d publish and win prizes some day if only I wrote something ”real.” That was my City of Gold, the mystical goal that I reached with my first publication. It was a story drawing on my own life as the son of Holocaust survivors, a story I needed to tell but was afraid to.

Read full storyComments { 1 }