Happy News Today

Today, one of my students who is now a junior at Boston University called out of the blue, told me he was on spring break, and made a request that brightened my heart: “Could I come over and write with you this week?”

My answer: “Well, of course you can.”

Shaun is a boy who I saw as a student from sixth grade until twelfth, not constantly, but a lot over the years because he loved to write science fiction. We worked on several stories together and submitted them to the Scholastic Artists and Writers contest. He won bronze awards his freshman, sophomore and junior years in high school and then he won a Silver Medal at state for his senior portfolio of writing that included several stories, an essay, and several poems. This was a major accomplishment and one for which he and I were very proud. Then off he went to college in Boston and I haven’t heard from him. Until today.

One of the wonderful aspects of being a private writing teacher is the number of hours I spend with my students working one-on-one. We write AP essays together, long short stories, and other projects that involve lots of time, and in the process, we become good friends. We are primarily focused on the work, but there is that extra time of getting to know little parts of each other’s lives, and we develop a real closeness with one another.

One of the toughest parts of being a private writing teacher is when my little chicks leave the nest and head to college. I miss them and I’m always curious about how they are doing. Often, they check back in with me and often ask for help on a paper or so. However, at some point, they are fully independent and I lose touch with them. Of course, I sometimes run into them somewhere in town – at the movies or at a shopping center and we greet each other like old friends.

And then there’s Shaun, who has asked to not just come for a visit, or even help on a paper, but rather to come back for a bit of our shared fiction-writing experience together. I am deeply touched by that request.

So, on Thursday I will see a boy I haven’t laid eyes on in three years. I am delighted. I will get to hear how BU is and how his college experience is faring. And then we’ll write and I’ll get to see how much he’s grown in his skill. That will be the best treat of all.

I am a happy woman tonight. There’s nothing quite like seeing an old friend again; especially one you’ve known since they were twelve and they are now twenty-one.writing

4 Comments Add yours

  1. This is wonderful!! I have begged for them to let me teach a writing course at school, but right now it seems more important to them for me to be helping students with math and trying to get them to pass the state tests so they can graduate. They are not doing all that well at writing either, but English teachers are a lot easier to find, supposedly, than math teachers.

    1. Yes, math help is so needed, Juliana, I’m sure they are eager to use your expertise in that area. Still, teaching writing is so much fun. Perhaps next year!

  2. This is delightful a previous student wants YOU to work with, especially out of the blue. Something I’ve been wanting to mention for ages but somehow don’t. How wonderful that youngsters are learning the art of writing at such a young age. I wish we had someone like you when I was growing up.

    1. Thank you, Tess. Yes, I wish I had had a writing teacher when I was growing up, too. Our kids today get some wonderful advantages. There’s nothing like having someone working one-on-one to help provide that much needed feedback.

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