Archive for the “teaching memoir” Category

Benefits of Teaching Memoir: Amazing stories

December 30, 201817 CommentsPosted in careers/jobs for people who are blind, guest blog, memoir writing, politics, teaching memoir, writing prompts

The memoir-writing classes I lead are all on break now, so I have time to file through essays they wrote for our last six-week session and choose some to share with readers here. At Halloween I asked writers in my class at The Admiral at the Lake to use 500 words to answer the question […]

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When Whitney retires, can she be a reading buddy?

November 23, 20184 CommentsPosted in blindness, book tour, questions kids ask, Seeing Eye dogs, teaching memoir, visiting schools

A week ago at this time, Whitney and I were answering questions from third-graders who attend Goudy Elementary, a Public school in Chicago’s Uptown neighborhood. The third graders are part of a Friday “reading buddies” program at Admiral At the Lake, a retirement community where I lead weekly memoir-writing classes. Goudy is near The Admiral. […]

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Benefits of Teaching Memoir: It Can Be Good for a Laugh

November 7, 20183 CommentsPosted in careers/jobs for people who are blind, guest blog, memoir writing, teaching memoir, writing prompts

All five of the weekly memoir-writing classes I lead in Chicago are back in full swing now, and Michael Graff, a writer in one of the Village Chicago classes I lead, generously agreed to let us share a deadpan “Back to School” essay he read out loud Monday for the first meeting of the current […]

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