Five
young writers from Windham Middle School stood out among 800 letters submitted statewide
for the annual national reading and writing program Letters About Literature
organized by the Center for the Book in the Library of Congress.
Forty-seven
letters were selected by the Maine Humanities Council, which operates the
program in Maine, for recognition. Five of those letters were written by students
in GT/English language arts teacher Kim McBride’s classes.
Letters
About Literature invites students to think about a book, story, poem or play
that is meaningful to them, and write a letter to the author, living or dead,
to talk about the impact of that work on their lives, said McBride.
“We participate
every year in my classes and we have had some success in the past but this was
definitely a banner year for us,” she said. “We’re very proud of that, and
couldn’t be more delighted that our student letters are having such success.”
McBride
said that her students are thoughtful readers and writers, and she attributes
some of this year’s success to the adoption in the district of a new writing
program called Units of Study. “It’s been really helpful in teaching students
how to best organize their thoughts and be articulate on paper,” she said.
There
is increasing emphasis at WMS on how to write, she added, including how to
organize thoughts, express them on paper, and use sufficient details so that
the reader understands what is going on in the author’s head and heart. “I
think that’s a big part of it. It’s the ability to be articulate and
introspective and connect to literature and understand how literature helps us
grow,” she said.
The
five winning letters are personal, compelling and heartfelt, said McBride. The
literature selected and personal connections spanned a wide range of topics. One
student used Peter Pan to reflect on personal growth and moving towards
adulthood. Another wrote about a novel that helped her address personal anxiety
experiences. A third connected literature to the true meaning of family, while
the fourth chose a poem about finding your own way in life. The fifth letter
spoke of a science fiction novel that helped the student understand that
everyone has their own gifts and path in life. “All of the stories were quite
personal, and quite heartfelt and quite wonderful,” said McBride.
The
letters allowed students to show how reading helps them understand themselves
and the world around them in a way they didn’t before, according to McBride.
All of the students who participated, not just the winners, felt affirmed by
the process, and the understanding that the hard work they do throughout the
year pays off. “It shows us how capable our students are, and we should be
really proud of all of our students and the hard work that they do every day
that so often goes unrecognized,” said McBride.
Of
the five students selected for recognition, four are semi-finalists and will
move on to the state level, where finalists in three grade levels are selected
to be entered into the national competition.
The
Windham Middle School students who received recognition for their letters are:
Audrey Day, grade 6; Anna Becker, grade 7; Brooke Keenan, grade 7; Estrella
Pacanza Rogers, grade 7; and Emma Gallant, grade 8.
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