They sit on the wire
looking down at
us in our cars
thinking about
what it must be like
to be human
and wait for a
traffic light to
turn red,
green, red.
By Alex, 9th grade
Have you ever wanted to attend a writing workshop with your son or daughter? Now is your chance! Esalen Institute, a workshop and retreat center in Big Sur, California, is offering a special opportunity for parents and children to journey together into the imagination.

Here is the information about Rip the Page! A Workshop for Kids and Parents from the Esalen website:
Weekend of April 13-15, 2012
Rip the Page! A Workshop for Kids and Parents
“This is an imaginative writing weekend for children aged eight to fourteen and their parents to loosen up on the page while experimenting with zany poem-making prompts, dares and double-dares, and truths and lies,” writes Karen Benke. “This experience can un-stick ideas, dreams, and stories. We will erect a fun and safe tent of wonder in which to unleash the dreaming and doodling sides of our minds as we put the zing back in our writing and capture images guaranteed to connect to our hearts and voices. This is a creative writing play-shop where the punctuation police are left behind and best-guess spelling is more than fine. No grades. No gold stars. Just plenty of encouragement and quirky experiments involving magic word tickets that you’ll make and take back home. No prior experience is necessary. All materials are provided. Simply arrive with a willingness to surprise yourself and a fast-moving favorite pen. On Saturday afternoon, we’ll be joined by singer/songwriter, Scott Grace, who will create on-the-spot songs using our poems and literary creations.”
Please note: This workshop has the following schedule. Friday: 7:30-8:30 p.m. Saturday: 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; 3:30-6:30 p.m. Sunday: 9:30-11:30 a.m.
Reservations Information (Accommodations & Pricing)
Writers in the Schools partners with Beeville ISD for intensive writing project
When we think of big cities, we think of tightly packed, vertical apartments, clustered skyscrapers, and commuter-filled trains. But to the residents of Beeville, TX, the “big city” means the colossal sprawl Houston. During our wonderful visit to Beeville, we found that our students’ initial interest in us centered on our metropolitan origins. For many of them, Houston is a mythical land accessible only by traveling sports teams, a land filled with shopping malls, upscale restaurants, and, strangest of all, professional writers.
“Are you a real writer?” students asked. When we showed them our books or told them about our projects, many seemed to be in awe.
Perhaps this is part of why the students at Moreno Middle School, where the three of us spent two intensive days teaching creative writing, were so engaged. “They never write that much for me,” one teacher told us. It was clear, however, that many of the students had a genuine interest in writing, and were excited to meet adults who had prioritized it in their lives.
We worked with the students to develop an understanding of the key elements of narrative and poetry. We collaborated on story arcs and invented our own cities, some even stranger than Houston. We were truly impressed by their quick grasp of writing concepts like imagery and simile, as seen in this poem by Ms. Mertz’s student, Ysidro:
City of Gold and Silver
Through the walls of gold
you can feel the cool breeze of the morning
the ground still wet from the morning dew
as you look off the diamond balcony you can see
the houses made of gold and silver
with light posts still glowing with embers
the sun is like an orange small and still
as you walk down the stairs the library is still and calm
you slowly walk in the city of gold and silver
with the strange markings on the walls
everyone still sleeping except for the old man
the old man sitting on a gold rocking chair cursing at the
wind
as the day goes on the city turns brighter
than the sun itself and after the hours of sun
night falls with a still glow and the city of gold and silver
is still bright.
This poem testifies to the dedication and talent of Moreno’s teachers, who made us feel welcome in their classrooms and even thanked us during a school assembly. We left Beeville feeling a little sorry to go and hopeful for another chance to leave the big city and return.
By Ryler Dustin, Jesse Donaldson, and Becca Wadlinger, Writers in the Schools
Writers in the Schools thanks Tracy Saucier and The Joe Barnhart Foundation for making this experience possible.
A Poem Inspired by Ryler Dustin’s “Allie”
Big brother,
you’re missed.
Missed like when you missed
the bus on the first day of school, and mom
had to drive you there.
Missed like when you made me go
away from your room when you had
your friend come over.
You’re missed when you’re mad
and start to yell because I got you
in trouble. Missed like when you put
my dolls down the toilet. Missed
when you went on a school trip,
and had to go to the hospital
because you broke your arm.
And now you are missed since
you are serving our country
as a Navy soldier.
But you won’t be missed
when you come back home to tell me
your new stories and adventures.
Big brother,
you’re missed.
You always have been.
By Fallon, 6th grade

Calling Kindergarten, 1st, 2nd and 3rd Grade Authors and Artists to enter the 2012 PBS KIDS GO! Writing Contest!
Children write and illustrate their own stories and enter for a chance to win great prizes at both the local and national level.
Entry deadline is Monday, March 19, 2012.
For Official Entry Form and Rules click on the link below or pick up a copy from the children’s librarian at your local public library.
Every child who enters will receive a certificate of achievement and 1st Place winners for each grade will represent HoustonPBS in the national contest. Have fun writing and illustrating!

For the last 40 years the Coretta Scott King Awards have been given to African American authors and illustrators for their outstanding contributions to children’s literature. The books chosen promote understanding among races and uphold the American Dream. The Awards commemorate the work of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and honor Mrs. Coretta Scott King.
For past winners from 1970-present, check out this list. The 2012 winner is Kadir Nelson’s Heart and Soul: The Story of America and African Americans, published by HarperCollins. The story and the artwork in this book are stunning. Go get your copy today and help celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Coretta Scott King Awards in Children’s Literature.
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Exhibition of artwork and writing from the Artbound! and Writers in the Schools (WITS) residencies at Wharton Elementary
Writers in the Schools and Art League Houston have partnered to present WhARTon NARraTives, an exhibition of over sixty pieces of artwork
and writing by second and third grade students from the Wharton Elementary School who have been taking part in Art League Houston’s Artbound! and Writer in the Schools In-School residency programs. The exhibition opens with a free public reception between 2:00 – 3:30 pm on Saturday, February 11, 2012, and runs through March 2, 2012 in the Project Gallery, 1953 Montrose Blvd. City Council Member Ellen Cohen will be the keynote speaker.
Through the collaborative project called Artbound!, Art League Houston brings visual artists into the classroom to make the arts more accessible to inner-city youth. WhARTon NARraTives, the first exhibition of its kind at this dual-language academy, showcases the synergy that results when visual arts and writing come together. For more information, visit Art League Houston’s website.
Photos by Art League Houston via Flickr
Schools across the nation are signing up for Digital Learning Day, a national campaign that celebrates innovation in the classrooms on February 1st. On this day, administrators, teachers, parents, and students everywhere will unite to discuss the ways in which technology has revolutionized the curriculum and exchange ideas on how to improve computer literacy.
Started by the Alliance for Excellent Education, Digital Learning Day empowers members of the education community with a number of resources and tool kits that are available on the group’s website. Their professional development offerings include interdisciplinary lesson plans, digital learning examples by district, and webinars.
Individuals are encouraged to participate in this free event no matter what their technical skill level. Best of all, colleagues who spread the word about Digital Learning Day can win a $100 grant for their classroom. Be the first Houston school to get on board with Digital Learning Day by signing up today!
I love music because it clears my mind. When I’m in a good mood, I listen to Indie music on the radio. The first time I ever heard Radio Lollipop (a fully equipped radio station staffed by a team of volunteers at Texas Children’s Hospital) was January 31, 2011. I was in a bed feeling down on the 9th floor. It was just my second day, and I was thinking about home. When the music came on, I listened for a while. Music is a way to daydream for me. Someday I’d like to be a professional cello player. I learned how to play in 5th grade, and I feel in a better place when I play. I had to quit when I got sick, but I want to start again. Writing is another art that I like. I use it to express myself. I don’t share everything I write, but I think it helps me to get it out. I remember I wrote a story once about two kids in an enchanted forest. I don’t get writer’s block usually. The words just flow out and onto the paper. If I could tell people something, I would say that there are lots of ways to express yourself and to go out and find your passion. For me, it is music and writing.
By Jasmine, 10th grade
Every summer Writers in the Schools (WITS) partners with Rice School Literacy and Culture Project (SLC) to host Summer Creative Writing Workshops across the city of Houston. We are pleased to let you know about their January Early Literacy Conference, which takes place this Saturday, January 14th, at Rice University. If you value creativity in the classroom, then you won’t want to miss this!
Here is a blurb from their website:
A 2010 IBM survey of international business leaders cited creativity as the most important skill in today’s economy. How does this finding impact the real world of schools, teachers, and students? Join the School Literacy and Culture Project of Rice University’s Center for Education for our 13th annual half-day early literacy conference as we focus on practical ideas for supporting creative thinking and problem-solving in the classroom.
Dr. Patsy Cooper (SLC’s Founding Director), Associate Professor of Education at Queens College, City University of New York, and Karen Capo (SLC’s current Director) will deliver the opening address. Karen will set the stage by asking the question, What is Creativity and Why Does It Matter? Patsy will provide our first perspective, The Very Practical Role of Imagination in Early Literacy. This year we will offer two featured breakout sessions. We are pleased to welcome Anthony Brandt, Associate Professor of Composition at Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music, who will inspire all educators with his session, Why Young Minds Need Art. Also,Patsy Cooper will reprise her popular keynote from last year, Let’s Try It Again: A Positive Approach to Helping Young Children Recover from Their Missteps and Misbehavior.
Other breakout sessions for teachers of toddlers through second grades, led by School Literacy and Culture Project (SLC) staff and guests, will include several on SLC’s renowned language/literacy based storytelling curriculum for first time attendees as well as a variety of other sessions addressing special interests such as toddler literacy, bilingual concerns, integrated curriculum, and creative writing for the school-age child. Details will be available in mid-December on this web page.
Creative Communication: A Celebration of Today’s Writers chose Writers in the Schools (WITS) student Jasmin Johnson as one of the top 10 4th grade poets in the nation. Three of her poems will be published in an anthology of student writing. Jasmin also will receive a $50 savings bond. For more information about Creative Communication contests, please visit their website. The next deadline for poetry is December 6, 2011.
Here are two of Jasmin’s poems:
The Runaway Imagination
Boom! Oh, no, my imagination is
exploding out of my head. It happened
just this morning coming out of bed.
I put on a headband my imagination
denies. I fall out of bed and cry.
Oh no, I feel dull. I lost my sense of
fun. My crazy imagination is on the run.
I have to catch it quickly, but wait! It’s
time for school but my imagination starts
to head for the pool. I pull it aside and
bring it to class. Hurray! It’s 9:30, I’m in
time for math. But wait! There isn’t
school today. You mean that there was
time to play? Oh, what a ridiculous
Saturday. You silly imagination,
get back in my head!
By Jasmin, 4th grade
Cup Full of Elephant: A Self-Portrait
I try to copy what I see.
Is it good enough?
Do you blame me?
Art is hard. I’ll just draw a cup. Do
you see? Is it good enough?
I’ll try to copy what I see.
Is it good enough?
Do you blame me?
Art is hard. I’ll draw a set of paints! Do
you see? Is it good enough?
I’ll try to copy what I see.
Is it good enough?
Do you blame me?
Art is hard. I’ll draw an elephant butt.
Wait! An elephant butt? Ewww!
By Jasmin, 4th grade
My fall made a fortune of the alphabet
The small city trembled like a drum
Opera chants smelled like garlic
The sky looked like a clump of salt
Your secret was a gift to the tongue
The continent filled with ashes
The ink slipped into my colored tongue
The metaphor shot tomorrow into a million pieces
The flame jumped into a storm of Oklahoma stars
The crowd leaped over the fortune of gifts
In the morning my tongue swallowed my flute
Friday was born by laughing and remembering
My spitted truth made a knot in my tongue
By Luis, 6th grade
Did you ever want to make an animated movie? Using the Xtranormal Movie Maker, now you can. Simply choose your characters, type out the dialogue, and watch. Have fun!