Tag: topic themes

Wisdom from the Middle: Using Our Voices to Change the World

jessica herring classroom

By Jessica Herring  of Wisdom from the Middle

I find that people are very concerned about change.  I don’t necessarily mean concerned in a negative context.  I just feel that people fixate on the idea of change and what that will look like, how it will affect them.  When we’re children, our teachers and our parents usher us through the myriad physical, emotional, and social changes that we will experience on our path to adulthood.  I get to experience the other side of that coin as I witness the changes of my seventh grade students while they battle through the throes of adolescence. But these changes are ever so slight and daily changes.  They may change our own personal worlds, but they don’t change the whole world.

As we come into the phases of adulthood, we tend to focus less on these everyday changes and more on the way our world is changing, and boy, does it seem to be changing! Sometimes, it can feel like we can have little impact on such a great big world.  Sometimes, it can feel like just keeping up with all those changes is good enough. But then I stop to think, is keeping up really enough?

As a middle school teacher, I spend my days with students who are in a very egocentric phase of life.  Whether you remember it or not, you and I were both equally selfish when we were twelve and thirteen.  It’s just a time in life when your own personal drama is far more important than whatever else is going on around you.  I try to make it my personal mission to pull my students out of themselves and into the rest of the world.  We spend a lot of time on social justice issues, both in a historical context and in the world around us.  I want them to understand issues that are pertinent to their lives, and I want them to realize that their voices can make an impact.  They can use their voices, and their writing, to change their world.

Right now, my students are writing anti-bullying speeches in the style of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech.  Dr. King was one person who realized he could use his voice to change his world.  Several of the students at our middle school have come to this realization as well, and they’ve formed a leadership team to plan a Bullying Awareness Week.  Watching them “be the change they wish to see in the world” gives me great hope for our future.  If they can be social activists in middle school, a time when the weight of what the world thinks is exceptionally heavy, I can only hope they will grow into adults who understand the power of one voice of positive change.

I can’t just encourage my students to use their voices to change the world without modeling that same behavior.  I have to walk the walk, too. As a writer and an educator, I want to change the landscape of my profession.  Every day on Twitter and on the news, there seems to be a negative story about education.  Whether it’s a discussion about Common Core or a news story about an educator who made bad decisions, the general word on the street is that things in education aren’t going well.

The problem with this media slant, is that it simply isn’t true.  There’s a lot of good going on in classrooms all over our state and our country.  There are educators connecting through social media for professional development who are using their voices for change, impacting classrooms outside their schoolhouses and across state lines.  I want to be a part of that change.  I want to continue to use my voice to emphasize the positive things I see happening every, single day.  Making the choice to be unflinchingly positive may seem like a small step toward changing my world, but I don’t think it is.  I think it’s the first step toward a major shift in thinking in the schoolhouse. 

 jessica herring

 

Jessica teaches middle school in Central Arkansas where she encourages her students to change their world for the better.  She lives in Little Rock.  Read about the work her students are doing and the lessons they are learning on her personal blog, Wisdom From the Middle.

Twitter:@jessicarae929
Pinterest: jherring929
Google +: Jessica Herring

 

3 Reasons I Love My blog Schedule {Love Story}

3 Reasons I Love My blog Schedule {Love Story}
Written by Sarah E. White of Our Daily Craft

I’ve never been a very consistent blogger.  Actually, that’s not true.  When I’m paid to blog I can do it with consistency and style, and even work ahead of myself when the need arises.

When it comes to personal blogging, though, it’s a different story. I have good intentions, and lots I want to write about, but my blog is always at the bottom of the to-do list, and often after all the commitments of my for-pay writing there aren’t enough hours with my daughter out of the house to get personal blogging (and, heaven forbid, a little house cleaning or exercise or something) done, too.

This year I resolved to do better, so I set myself a blogging schedule, or maybe more precisely a framework for my posts. Each day has a theme into which I try to fit my writing. This will be different for every site but here’s mine:

  •  “My Life” Monday: this is the place for postsabout what’s going on in my life and household, parenting, general crafting essays and other stuff that doesn’t fit into the other days (recipes, bookreviews, etc.)
  • Tutorial Tuesday: just like it sounds. Here I’ll teach my readers how to do something or share a crafty project.
  • Whatever Wednesday: Wednesday is sort of a wildcard day. It usually looks a lot like Monday, with posts about crafting,parenting, what I’m working on and what we’re playing with.
  • Things I Love Thursday: a place to talk about books, websites, companies, people, products or whatever else I’m into that week.
  • “Found it on Pinterest” Friday: to keep myself actually creating some of the things I find on Pinterest, these posts feature my take on projects on my boards.

The Case against Schedules

I know the thought of a schedule for blogging is pretty off-putting for a lot of us. I didn’t actually expect to like it. Our blogs are personal, they have to do with what’s going on in our lives, and you can’t schedule that.

Furthermore, blogging is creative,and you never know what you’ll want to write about from day to day, right?

That’s true, but it’s also true that a framework for thinking about what we’re going to write can be just the thing we need to get us on track, keep us motivated, even make us more creative as bloggers. In fact, there are plenty of reasons to love scheduling.

Organization Will Set You Free

  1. My schedule makes planning my week easy. Instead of wondering what I’m going to write about from day to day, or thinking “maybe I should write a tutorial,” I know basically what I need to be thinking about to fill my week. And it’s already happening pretty naturally. Something will happen during the week that will be great to write about for a Monday, or I’ll be doing something and think it would be perfect for a Thursday post.
  2. It makes me more creative. Knowing that I need to have a tutorial every Tuesday and something I made from Pinterest every Friday means there needs to be more crafting built into my schedule. But beyond that I’m thinking like a blogger more, seeing post possibilities everywhere. I find myself trying out new things more often and taking lots of pictures and notes so I always have a steady stream of post ideas at the ready. I’m also visiting more blogs, learning from other bloggers and getting more ideas to try.
  3. It helps me stay focused. I started this on January 4 and managed 17 posts in January compared to just seven in December, when I thought I was trying to post more often. More often than not, I’m posting every weekday now. I usually know at the beginning of the week what my posts are going to be about, which means I’m already thinking about them before I start writing. That makes the actual writing go a little faster, and a couple of times I’ve actually managed to do a little writing in advance.

I won’t say a schedule is foolproof, and I’m sure there will be slipups, vacations and days I just don’t get to the blog, but on the whole I love my new arrangement.

I’m getting more posts written, getting more blog traffic and having more fun. Who wouldn’t love that?

Sarah E. White is a freelancewriter, editor, blogger, wife and mom of a 2-year-old based in Fayetteville.She’s the Guide to Knitting for About.com and writes about her crafty life at Our Daily Craft .