Freshman vs. Self: Memoirs from the Ninth Grade

Freshman vs. Self: Memoirs from the Ninth Grade
Author: Alexa Garvoille
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 694
Release: 2012-10-14
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 1300303808

High school freshmen at Durham School of the Arts, a magnet school in North Carolina, share their personal stories in this third installment of the Going on 15 series. A collection of short memoirs written by young adult authors and edited by their peers, Freshman vs. Self covers a wide range of topics facing youth today. From coping with unwanted stepparents to discovering inner beauty, the true stories in Freshman vs. Self allow teenagers to speak for themselves. Relevant for a young audience and revelatory for educators and parents alike, these memoirs will remind you what it's like to face the foe that is the self.

Going on 15: Memoirs of Freshmen

Going on 15: Memoirs of Freshmen
Author: Alexa Garvoille
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 358
Release: 2010-08-04
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 0557543576

Freshman writers at Durham School of the Arts, a public arts magnet school in North Carolina, share the stories of their teenage lives in this wide-ranging collection of short memoirs. Originally written for a class project, the memoirs were edited by student Kaitlin Medlin and staff and supervised by teacher Alexa Garvoille. Covering topics from the power of the arts to the effects of abuse, from journeys of faith to chronicles of friendship, Going on 15: Memoirs of Freshmen reminds adult and teen readers alike to look beyond the friends, the classmates, the students, or the children we think we know, and listen to their voices.

Imaginative Teaching through Creative Writing

Imaginative Teaching through Creative Writing
Author: Amy Ash
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2021-03-25
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1350152692

Growing out of recent pedagogical developments in creative writing studies and perceived barriers to teaching the subject in secondary education schools, this book creates conversations between secondary and post-secondary teachers aimed at introducing and improving creative writing instruction in teaching curricula for young people. Challenging assumptions and lore regarding the teaching of creative writing, this book examines new and engaging techniques for infusing creative writing into all types of language arts instruction, offering inclusive and pedagogically sound alternatives that consider the needs of a diverse range of students. With careful attention given to creative writing within current standards-based educational systems, Imaginative Teaching Through Creative Writing confronts and offers solutions to the perceived difficulty of teaching the subject in such environments. Divided into two sections, section one sees post-secondary instructors address pedagogical techniques and concerns such as workshop, revision, and assessment before section two explores hands-on activities and practical approaches to instruction. Focusing on an invaluable and underrepresented area of creative writing studies, this book begins a much-needed conversation about the future of creative writing instruction at all levels and the benefits of collaboration across the secondary/post-secondary divide.

It Was What It Was: My Memoir

It Was What It Was: My Memoir
Author: Diane Haley Toney
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 206
Release: 2017-11-05
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1387266896

It Was What It Was is a charming and heartwarming autobiography of life growing up in the idyllic post-war era of the South during the 1950's. Relating tales of family, love, self-sacrifice, faith, and community, the author recounts life in small-town Lavonia, Georgia during an era of rapid social change. From tales of wartime sacrifice, to the Mayberry-esque quality of small town life, the booming economic growth in the post-war era, the heyday of the teenage social scene in the 1950s, and UFO encounters in the dark secluded countryside, this story has something for everyone. In relating her childhood experiences and teenage years during and after the conclusion of World War II, and ending with her professional contributions in public education, Mrs. Toney's life story is overlaid and interwoven with the history of the small southern town of Lavonia. In doing so, her story is Lavonia's story. Beautifully written and conveyed with warmth and much humor, this biography of times gone by is not to be missed!

Freshmen

Freshmen
Author: Christine Lord
Publisher:
Total Pages: 148
Release: 1997
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 9781886427099

A collection of short stories on various topics, all written by American teenage writers in the ninth grade.

The Hollyhock DollsÑA Memoir: Growing Up in Michigan

The Hollyhock DollsÑA Memoir: Growing Up in Michigan
Author: Diane G. Wrobleski
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2017-05-03
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1483467449

- Take a step back and look into the experiences of a little girl growing up in Detroit with her two older sisters. - When the Shrine Circus was in town, her dad brought home clowns in costume, a bear trainer and a trapeze artist. - The adventures of the author and her sisters at boarding school. - The tragedy of losing her daughter Julie in a head-on collision, leaving a young husband and two little boys. - You'll laugh at the incident of the elephant on the roof, the wasp and the negligee, and the police almost arresting Santa Clause. - The happenings at their son Steve's wedding was so unusual and funny it could be an SNL skit. - The antics of a grandmother who seemed to have no filter when it came to her off-hand remarks. - You'll learn why this family loves Michigan and especially their beloved hometown, Detroit.

Act Your Age: A Coming of (Middle) Age Memoir

Act Your Age: A Coming of (Middle) Age Memoir
Author: Priscilla Lindsey Biddle
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 214
Release: 2016-06-21
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1483453561

"Act your age! From her mother's admonition in childhood, a middle ages, twice-married mother of four and a product of the deep south of the seventies makes her way though a meandering inner journey towards a quiet epiphany revealing what her mother's words really mean. This rite of passage at the ungainly age of fifty unfolds through twelve memoir-like narratives that will evoke both laughter and tears. Each chapter is an independent reflection on the dozens of daily anecdotes all of us live each day in the course of growing up and growing older. Reading the narratives may be like going through a shoe box of old photographs you find in the attic, not arrange in any seeming order, but, in total, creating a logic of their own. Memorable characters like Papa, Aunt Norma, Harrison Augustus Turnbull, and Artemesia rise from the narrator's southern Gothic roots. The narrator, nameless Every Woman, prides herself in being an introspective and competent adult, but her naiveté demonstrates that being an adult a really a state of mind, and finding truth is like entertaining company with chipped china. Coping with life's poignant struggles, like disease, old age, suicide, and murder, and its ordinary ones, like child-raising, teaching, pets, and church-going, she seeks sense in the nonsense with humor and with love"--Page 4 of cover.

Bibliography on Racism

Bibliography on Racism
Author: Center for Minority Group Mental Health Programs (U.S.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 918
Release: 1972
Genre: Mental health
ISBN:

Whistled

Whistled
Author: Dawn Duhamel
Publisher: Archway Publishing
Total Pages: 188
Release: 2020-09-25
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1480891789

A variety of traumatic personal events, including a physical assault, a home burglary, a school shooting, the layoffs of the Great Recession, and #metoo impacted Dawn Duhamel’s life. In Whistled, she shares her story, chronicling the events that shaped her. Living under the belief that working hard always pays off, and experiencing success that proved her theory, Duhamel was unprepared when, at the age of fifty, an anonymous, contrived whistleblower complaint was filed against her, ultimately resulting in her controversial termination. Blindsided by being fired for the first time, the ensuing self-doubt suffocated her spirit until, after twenty-four months of questioning and processing, she discovered what truly mattered, and the reasons to love herself again. Whistled narrates a story of how Duhamel found meaning in loss, hope in resiliency, and courage in vulnerability. For anyone who has been betrayed, fired, or felt discarded, this memoir is about finding your way back to your true and best self.