Teaching Writers Speak

Toronto Writing Project
Teaching Writers Speak

Teaching Writers Speak is for educators, researchers, and creative folks like us who view writing as a vehicle for change, both in our institutions and in the world at large. We chat with teachers, professors, community educators, and researchers to better support one another as teachers of writing, our students as writers, and our work as scholars in the field of critical literacy. Teaching Writers Speak is a podcast produced by members of the Toronto Writing Project (www.torontowritingproject.com).

Épisodes

  1. 12. We never fully arrive at "best" with Dr. Rob Simon

    3 DÉC.

    12. We never fully arrive at "best" with Dr. Rob Simon

    How can challenging traditional teaching and research methods and embracing diverse student literacies transform English Language Arts education to be a more inclusive and empowering experience for teachers and learners? Dr. Rob Simon, our guest today, is an associate professor and Associate Chair, Student Experience, in the Department of Curriculum, Teaching and Learning at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto. He is also Academic Director of the Centre for Urban Schooling, Director of the Toronto Writing Project, and Principal Investigator of the Addressing Injustices research project. Dr. Simon came to teaching in a non-traditional way, working in San Francisco with the Delancey Street Foundation, a self-help rehab facility for people who were recovering from addiction and people who had come through the criminal justice system. Through partnerships with community organizations in the Bay Area, he helped start the Life Learning Academy and after school programs that helped children thrive, in and out of school systems that had marginalized them. This community and people centered collaborative work of reinventing school, alongside young people with different backgrounds from his own, still guides his work today. In this episode, Dr. Simon shares nuggets of wisdom on promising practices in teaching and research, and drawing upon learners’ rich literate lives to empower them in the classroom. His teaching and research focuses on Freirian critical literacy–reading the word to read the world and vice versa–and practitioner inquiry, which challenges research hierarchies by privileging teachers as knowledge creators and theorizers of their own teaching practice. Mentioned in this episode: “Without Comic Books, There Would Be No Me”: Teachers as Connoisseurs of Adolescents’ Literate Lives .... Teaching Writers Speak is a podcast developed by members of the Toronto Writing Project. The Toronto Writing Project—or TWP for short—is made up of teachers and researchers who view writing as a vehicle for change, both in our institutions and in the world at large.  This episode was produced by Celeste Kirsh and Melissa Arasin. Rob Simon, TWP’s director, is our executive producer. Our theme music is by Doug Friesen.  You can learn more about the Toronto Writing Project, and sign up for our upcoming writing workshops and speakers series, by visiting www.torontowritingproject.com.

    1 h 8 min
  2. 2023-05-29

    11. Critical Self-Reflection and Teaching an LGBTQ+ Literature Course with Dr. Mollie Blackburn

    How can we as teachers, researchers, and activists  make ourselves visible and vulnerable on the page? And what happens when we disagree with the past versions of ourselves that we encounter once we’ve committed our choices to writing? These are some of the questions at the heart of our conversation with Dr. Mollie Blackburn. Mollie is a Professor in the Department of Teaching and Learning at the Ohio State University. Her research focuses on literacy, language, and social change, with particular attention to LGBTQ+ youth and the teachers who serve them. Mollie’s also no stranger to Writing Projects like ours: She spent many years as an active member of the Philadelphia Writing Project, and she is a long-time member of the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE), where she was recently recognized with its inaugural LGBTQ+ Advocacy and Leadership Award. In her most recent book, Moving across Differences: How Students Engage LGBTQ+ Themes in a High School Literature Class, Mollie offers an unflinching portrait of her teaching and advocacy work with young folks. Today she offers insights gleaned from that work over the years and tells us how she’s learned to embrace humility and vulnerability as she continues to think and write about the very human exchange that is teaching and learning. Teaching Writers Speak is a podcast developed by members of the Toronto Writing Project. The Toronto Writing Project—or TWP for short—is made up of teachers and researchers who view writing as a vehicle for change, both in our institutions and in the world at large.  This episode was produced by Celeste Kirsh, Velta Douglas, and Ty Walkland. Celeste is our editor and Rob Simon, TWP’s director, is our executive producer. Our theme music is by Doug Freisen.  You can learn more about the Toronto Writing Project, and sign up for our upcoming writing workshops and speakers series, by visiting www.torontowritingproject.com.

    28 min
  3. 2023-05-01

    10. Embracing Digital Multimodal Composing with Celeste Kirsh

    How do teachers navigate the boundaries between the physical world of the classroom and the virtual worlds of social media, podcasting, and digital composition? Celeste Kirsh, our guest today, has been tracing those boundaries for over ten years. Celeste is a middle school English and social studies teacher, as well as a blogger, podcaster, social media presence, and now a PhD candidate at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. Her name will be familiar to any of you who have tuned in to previous episodes of our show, since it’s her editing expertise and technical wizardry that deliver these conversations to your ears.  You might also know Celeste from her own podcast, Teaching Tomorrow, where she riffs on the future of learning with a range of top-notch guests. Today, Celeste shares what it’s like to be an educator who is teaching and learning out loud, in a public sphere, and how she continues to straddle the virtual world and the so-called “real” world as a teacher educator and emerging scholar of digital composition.  Teaching Writers Speak is a podcast developed by members of the Toronto Writing Project. The Toronto Writing Project—or TWP for short—is made up of teachers and researchers who view writing as a vehicle for change, both in our institutions and in the world at large.  This episode was produced by Celeste Kirsh, Velta Douglas, and Ty Walkland. Celeste is our editor and Rob Simon, TWP’s director, is our executive producer. Our theme music is by Doug Freisen.  You can learn more about the Toronto Writing Project, and sign up for our upcoming writing workshops and speakers series, by visiting www.torontowritingproject.com.

    54 min
  4. 2023-04-17

    9. Where 2SLGBTQ+ Research and Theatre Meet with Dr. Tara Goldstein

    How can we carve out our own creative pathways that honour but also push against the boundaries set by the institutions we serve? Dr. Tara Goldstein, our guest today, has spent an entire career paving her own roads as an academic, playwright, and LGBTQ+ activist. Currently serving as Vice Principal of New College at the University of Toronto, Tara’s decades-long career as a professor, teacher educator, and “performed ethnography” researcher has inspired legions of teachers and community educators to make things better for diverse youth and families.  Tara is also a writer, playwright, and director of Gailey Road Productions in Toronto. Her work sits at the crossroads where “research meets theatre and theatre meets research.” And truly that work is groundbreaking: performed ethnographies like Harriet’s House and Out At School have created space for conversations about gender, sexuality, and schooling where, for decades, there was only silence. Her latest project, The Love Booth and Other Plays, about the American Psychological Association’s removal of homosexuality from its list of mental disorders, will premiere at Toronto Pride in June 2023.  Tara tours us through these and other landmark moments across her extraordinary career in our conversation today and tells us what’s on the horizon as she approaches another milestone: her retirement.  Connect with Tara on Twitter: @GaileyRoad Teaching Writers Speak is a podcast developed by members of the Toronto Writing Project. The Toronto Writing Project—or TWP for short—is made up of teachers and researchers who view writing as a vehicle for change, both in our institutions and in the world at large.  This episode was produced by Celeste Kirsh, Velta Douglas, and Ty Walkland. Celeste is our editor and Rob Simon, TWP’s director, is our executive producer. Our theme music is by Doug Freisen.  You can learn more about the Toronto Writing Project, and sign up for our upcoming writing workshops and speakers series, by visiting www.torontowritingproject.com.

    54 min
  5. 2023-04-03

    8. Children Writing Their Legacies with Land in Daniela Bascuñan’s Elementary Classroom

    How can teachers support young students to locate themselves in the world and contend with some of the more troubling legacies that shape our collective experiences? That is one question animating Daniela Bascuñan’s classroom teaching and her work as a teacher researcher. Daniela, our guest on this episode, has been teaching 2nd, 3rd, and 4th grade elementary school in Toronto for over twenty-five years. Her name will be familiar to listeners of our little podcast: not only has she been a member of the Toronto Writing Project since its inception, but she planted vital seeds that helped bring this show to life.  Over the course of her career, Daniela’s been seeking ways to invite more of her students’ lives and experiences into the classroom as resources to make sense of how we relate to one another, our histories, and the land we stand on. And, as you’ll hear in our chat today, Daniela doesn’t hesitate to tackle some of the tougher issues that shape those relations, including military violence, residential schooling, and the broader legacies of settler colonialism. One of her goals as a teacher and a scholar is to challenge the “widely believed notion that very young children do not have the capacity to deconstruct [such] issues.”  You can find Daniela on Twitter @isPassingNotes Link to the article Daniela Bascuñán, Shawna M. Carroll, Mark Sinke & Jean-Paul Restoule (2022): Teaching as Trespass: Avoiding Places of Innocence, Equity & Excellence in Education, DOI: 10.1080/10665684.2021.1993112 Teaching Writers Speak is a podcast developed by members of the Toronto Writing Project. The Toronto Writing Project—or TWP for short—is made up of teachers and researchers who view writing as a vehicle for change, both in our institutions and in the world at large.  This episode was produced by Celeste Kirsh, Velta Douglas, and Ty Walkland. Celeste is our editor and Rob Simon, TWP’s director, is our executive producer. Our theme music is by Doug Freisen.  You can learn more about the Toronto Writing Project, and sign up for our upcoming writing workshops and speakers series, by visiting www.torontowritingproject.com.

    51 min
  6. 2023-03-20

    7. Sustaining an Adult Literacy Group with Will Edwards and Company

    What might an inviting, inclusive, and altogether more human approach to an adult literacy curriculum look and feel like? That’s a challenge that Dr. Will Edwards, one of our guests today, has been tackling over many years while teaching academic upgrading for adult learners at a community college in Toronto. As Will tells us, the academic upgrading program, like other adult literacy programs, invites people from across professional and geographical borders, with a range of experiences, histories, and interests, and attempts to funnel that diversity into standard and standardized performance tasks. Will bristled at this model’s “Come in, get educated, get the job, and get out” approach, so he began hosting a weekly reading and writing group where he and his students could slow down, get to know one another, and read and write about the experiences that make them human. That group has now been meeting for over a decade.  Today we’ll hear from some of that group’s founding members, including Will’s former students Ghofran, Karen, Pamela, and Shelley. Together they show us how a vulnerable, validating, and vitalizing community of learners can emerge from spaces that feel anything but. That means that this episode, like the group itself, is made up of many voices. Not only will we get to hear some of the prose and poetry that these folks have been writing together, but we’ll find out how and why they continue finding their way back to this community, even as their paths splinter and take different directions. Teaching Writers Speak is a podcast developed by members of the Toronto Writing Project. The Toronto Writing Project—or TWP for short—is made up of teachers and researchers who view writing as a vehicle for change, both in our institutions and in the world at large.   This episode was produced by Celeste Kirsh, Velta Douglas, and Ty Walkland. Celeste is our editor and Rob Simon, TWP’s director, is our executive producer. Our theme music is by Doug Freisen.  You can learn more about the Toronto Writing Project, and sign up for our upcoming writing workshops and speakers series, by visiting www.torontowritingproject.com.

    54 min
  7. 6. Tracing Multilingual Writing Trajectories with Dr. Amir Kalan

    2022-05-30

    6. Tracing Multilingual Writing Trajectories with Dr. Amir Kalan

    How might we move toward more organic practices to support multilingual learners as they write across languages, across borders, and across cultures? Dr. Amir Kalan has spent over twenty years teaching writing at all levels of education and in many places across the world. Now an assistant professor in the Department of Education at McGill University, Amir continues to challenge the ways second language classrooms often silo and assimilate students through particular genres and rhetorical performances. Topics covered in this conversation include: Using writing as a form of social action A short history of education as a colonial / industrial institution Why we need to consider more carefully the communities of writing that our students exist in Amir’s professional profile at McGill Amir on Twitter Teaching Writers Speak is a podcast developed by members of the Toronto Writing Project. The Toronto Writing Project––TWP for short––is made up of teachers and researchers who view writing as a vehicle for change, both in our institutions and in the world at large. Daniela Bascuñan, Velta Douglas, Will Edwards, Celeste Kirsh, Rob Simon, and Ty Walkland, all help to bring this podcast to life. Our theme music is composed by Doug Freisen. You can learn more about the Toronto Writing Project, and sign up for our upcoming writing workshops and speakers series, by visiting www.torontowritingproject.com.

    54 min
  8. 5. Unpacking Empathy with Nicole Mirra

    2022-05-16

    5. Unpacking Empathy with Nicole Mirra

    How do we encourage young people to confront the world as it is–warts and all–while also dreaming up possibilities for the world that could be? Dr. Nicole Mirra, our guest today, tells us that she is first and foremost a writer and a teacher, having taught high school in New York City and Los Angeles for many years. She is also a recently-tenured associate professor of urban teacher education in the Graduate School of Education at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, where her research explores the intersections of critical literacy and civic engagement with youth and teachers across classroom, community, and digital learning environments.  In this episode, Dr. Mirra touches on: - The Digital Democratic Dialogue (or 3D) Project - The possibilities and limits of empathy - The big and small moves we can make towards a more just and equitable future  Nicole on Twitter Nicole's research page Nicole's books on Amazon Teaching Writers Speak is a podcast developed by members of the Toronto Writing Project. The Toronto Writing Project––TWP for short––is made up of teachers and researchers who view writing as a vehicle for change, both in our institutions and in the world at large. Daniela Bascuñan, Velta Douglas, Will Edwards, Celeste Kirsh, Rob Simon, and Ty Walkland, all help to bring this podcast to life. Our theme music is composed by Doug Freisen. You can learn more about the Toronto Writing Project, and sign up for our upcoming writing workshops and speakers series, by visiting www.torontowritingproject.com.

    37 min
  9. 2022-04-04

    2. Building Community with Ashleigh Allen and Ben Gallagher

    How do we build community to support people to write? We often think of writing as a solitary activity that you do quietly, in your own head, with your own hands, without the influence of others. We sometimes assume that writing just wells up from inside of us and blurts itself onto the page. And often in schools writing is treated and assessed as a solitary intellectual activity rather than being intricately connected to the communities that we build and the people we are in relationship with. These communities and people don’t just contribute to the ideas that we’re writing about, but they create a space for us to be creative, vulnerable, and take risks. And of course, the word community has taken on a new cadence because of the COVID-19 pandemic. We are now building communities, in person and online, under new and exceptional circumstances. How will we continue to create spaces that allow people to be creative and to take risks with their words? In this episode, poets Ashleigh A. Allen and Ben Gallagher speak about their experiences creating communities of writing. Teaching Writers Speak is a podcast developed by members of the Toronto Writing Project. The Toronto Writing Project is made up of teachers and researchers who view writing as a vehicle for change in our institutions and in the world at large. Daniela Bascuñan, Velta Douglas, Will Edwards, Celeste Kirsh, Rob Simon, and Ty Walkland, all help to bring this podcast to life. Our theme music is composed by Doug Freisen. You can sign up for Toronto Writing Project's upcoming writing workshops and speakers series here.

    35 min
  10. 2022-03-21

    1. Writing Difficult Stories with Elizabeth Dutro

    How do we make space for the stories that children bring with them into classrooms—especially the difficult stories? Dr. Elizabeth Dutro, our guest today, likens those difficult stories to newly hatched baby chicks—the kind that we cup and cradle in our hands. Each of us carries these difficult stories with us into the classroom. As teachers, we often imagine that our students—the youngest ones especially—are like baby chicks, fragile creatures whose vulnerability must be protected. But Dr. Dutro’s book, The Vulnerable Heart of Literacy, reminds us that children can and do hold space for their own and their peers’ difficult stories, and that their experiences not only matter in school, but that they are essential to school writing. How can teachers honour and invite the innate vulnerability that children bring with them into classrooms? Today Dr. Dutro shares how the literacy classroom is brought to life when we make room for children’s stories to hatch and take flight. Teaching Writers Speak is a podcast developed by members of the Toronto Writing Project. The Toronto Writing Project is made up of teachers and researchers who view writing as a vehicle for change in our institutions and in the world at large. Daniela Bascuñan, Velta Douglas, Will Edwards, Celeste Kirsh, Rob Simon, and Ty Walkland, all help to bring this podcast to life. Our theme music is composed by Doug Freisen.  You can sign up for Toronto Writing Project's upcoming writing workshops and speakers series here.

    36 min

Notes et avis

5
sur 5
2 notes

À propos

Teaching Writers Speak is for educators, researchers, and creative folks like us who view writing as a vehicle for change, both in our institutions and in the world at large. We chat with teachers, professors, community educators, and researchers to better support one another as teachers of writing, our students as writers, and our work as scholars in the field of critical literacy. Teaching Writers Speak is a podcast produced by members of the Toronto Writing Project (www.torontowritingproject.com).

Pour écouter des épisodes au contenu explicite, connectez‑vous.

Suivez l’actualité de cette émission

Connectez-vous ou abonnez-vous pour suivre des émissions, enregistrer des épisodes et obtenir les dernières mises à jour.

Sélectionnez un pays ou une région

Afrique, Moyen-Orient et Inde

Asie-Pacifique

Europe

Amérique latine et les Caraïbes

Les États-Unis et le Canada