Back to Juggling

Last month I started teaching again as a preschool sub. 

That changed everything. I was thrilled to get out of the house, be with the little ones, and have a new rhythm to the day. At the same time, though, time was going to be a challenge. I’m a morning person -- everything that has to get done happens early in the day. 

Writing has always happened first thing. It’s when I have the energy to be creative and think clearly. When you’re working out of the house though, morning rhythms are completely different. There’s no more rolling out of bed in sweats and a tee with a leisurely cup of coffee. Now there’s showering, getting dressed, and the all-important preparation of snacks. In other words, there’s a schedule. Where does writing fit in?

For many years, I adhered to the I-can-only-write-in-the-morning maxim, until I realized that in the end you make your plans and the universe laughs. Nobody, least of all a deadline-wielding editor, cares whether you are a morning, mid-afternoon, or late- at-night person. They care about the job getting done. 

Then I realized I had to face facts. I could no longer be precious about when I write. I simply had to get the job done. Sometimes that means coming home from a day in the classroom where I am completely whipped, lying down for 45 minutes, then getting back to writing. The important thing is not to beat myself up on these days if I don’t get a massive amount done. Some writing always trumps no writing.

It’s great to be back in the world again. Now, I just have to do a bit of juggling on the writing front.

What’s the Story?

Here’s a problem I come up against a lot: great atmosphere, little story.

It’s when the writing student has a great sense of character, dialogue, and setting but there’s not much happening in terms of a story. The reader reads but they are going nowhere.

How to help?

Even the smallest children understand that good stories always have a beginning, a middle, and an end. The trick is always to hook the reader from the start. Kathy Caprino, a Senior Contributor at Forbes, says,

“We don’t start a story with: “I am going to tell you a story about the summer that I found out I wasn’t as timid as I thought.” What we publish instead is: “As I hung over the cliff, clinging to the exposed root of a windswept tree, I realized that I was braver than I thought...”

Another important point is…what’s the point? Why is the student telling this story in the first place? What is it that they want to get across? 

Which brings me to the final issue: what’s the problem? Often, the crux of the issue is that students are displaying great skills at the big three — character, dialogue, and setting — but have not identified why they are using these skills. When they can show the ultimate problem that the protagonist is about to solve – what every Bildungsroman, or hero’s journey is about – they have a real story.

For more on storytelling and how to engage readers:

https://www.forbes.com/sites/kathycaprino/2014/04/10/7-essential-tips-for-writers-who-hope-to-engage-millions-of-readers/?sh=5e2053451cad

The Art of Editing

Editing is really hard. Teaching editing is even harder.

I’ve had this conversation many times with students and parents. I don’t even know how I edit. I simply do it. And therein, perhaps, lies the problem. How do you teach something you simply do?

There are three cardinal rules I follow when editing. The first is that the little picture has to match the big picture. In other words, what the writer is trying to say in each sentence has to be consistent with the overall message. When presented with a new project — whether it be paper, play, or essay — I always look for what the writer wants to tell their audience. Then we work on each paragraph and sentence together to make sure they match that message.

Second: “Omit unnecessary words.” Strunk & White said it decades ago and it still holds true today. It is also one of the hardest aspects of editing to teach because writers can become very sensitive about having their words cut after having worked so hard on them in the first place. I always ask the writer whether there is a better way to say it, or if they see how they are repeating themselves simply using different words. By placing the responsibility for editing the work in the writer’s hands, it feels less offensive than the old red-pen-through-the-writing of yesteryear.

Write for the reader (part of “Omit unnecessary words”). One issue I’ve dealt with, which can be particularly challenging, is when writers are not writing for an audience but rather for themselves. A scene, for example, is described in massive detail that is not only unnecessary, but will turn the reader off, or worse, lose them by this point. One helpful tip here is to have the writer read the scene aloud and remind them that they are telling a story. Effective storytellers always use the least amount of words possible so that they keep their audience engaged.

Third, order equals method. One of the common mistakes new writers make is placing their paragraphs in the wrong order — “burying your lede” in the world of journalism. I’ve read many manuscripts where the story started in the wrong place and the paragraphs had to be — like a jigsaw puzzle — reconfigured in order for the reader to have a clear sense of how the story is going to unfold.

One of my favorite books on the subject is William Zinsser’s On Writing. “Clutter,” Zinnser says, “is the disease of American writing. We are a society strangling in unnecessary words, circular constructions, pompous frills and meaningless jargon.”

And one of my favorite moments in the book is when he refers to a World War II government black-out order:

"Such preparations shall be made as will completely obscure all Federal buildings and non-Federal buildings occupied by the Federal government during an air raid for any period of time from visibility by reason of internal or external illumination."

“I would have preferred,” Zinsser states, “the presidential approach taken by Franklin D. Roosevelt when he tried to convert into English his own government's memo[s]:”

"Tell them," Roosevelt said, "that in buildings where they have to keep the work going to put something across the windows."

As it turns out, the government must have read Zinsser’s book. How else would plainlanguage.gov have come about?

He’d probably approve of their reading list, as well.