Sunday, March 1, 2015

SOLSC 2015 #1: Let's begin!



Each day during March, I am participating in the Two Writing Teachers Slice of Life Story Challenge (SOLSC). All participants are writing about one moment, one part of their day, every day for thirty-one days. My slices will be primarily about teaching preschoolers. Check out the Two Writing Teachers  website for lots more reflections on teaching. Thanks especially to Stacey, Tara, Anna, Beth, Dana, and Betsy for hosting this writing challenge. 

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This is my fourth year of this writing challenge, and I am filled with what I now perceive as "happy trepidation" - a mixture of excitement, fear, and possibility. The preceding days have been quite a crescendo - my computer died and it took another four days before I was able to get an appointment at the "genius bar," four days filled with extreme ideas of me writing posts by long-hand and scanning these with my phone or begging and borrowing computers from everyone in my family each day during the month - how could I do this blogging challenge without my own personal workhorse? Oh my! 

In the end, the issue was minor and fixed quickly; however, I was told that my four year old computer is quite "aged" and that "jostling" could cause the issue to happen again. 

Now, I simply have to go thirty-one days without jostling my computer. 

What the heck is a memory stick?

So, therein lies the fun of the slicing challenge - there is always so much more going on than the very post(s) you are trying to write! 

How will I negotiate life in the midst of writing?

One part of my blogging preparation was reading all the fabulous information that Two Writing Teachers posted about the challenge. Remind you, this is my fourth year…much of this is now "re-reading" for me. Just this past week, Stacey wrote:

QUESTION: What should I write about? Can I write about teaching?

ANSWER: A slice of life storytelling technique that offers insight into an ordinary person’s life.  You can think of it as a small moment story.  You’re not telling about your whole day – just a piece of it.


and I realize -

I haven't been a real slicer.
I haven't been thinking of slicing as a storytelling technique.
I may have written every day for 31 days straight,
but I didn't write slices every day. 
Oh my! Not all of my posts are slices!
Actually,
it hit me bigger than this.
OH MY! NOT ALL OF MY POSTS ARE SLICES!!
Bigger still:
OH MY! NOT ALL OF MY POSTS ARE SLICES!!

Yes, I realize the title "Slice of Life" should have clued me in,
however, I interpreted it as simply - write a post each day.

Truly, it has been enough of a challenge to
make the space for writing each day, to create a daily post, to make my classroom - my preschoolers - the focus of the writing.

For my "slices" [and I now use the term very loosely], I have shared 
documentation of student work, 
what works and doesn't work in my classroom,
summations of training, workshops, lectures,
personal reflections, 
and
sometimes,
yes, 
only sometimes, 
a moment or part of my day;
sometimes,
only sometimes,
a slice of life.

OH MY! NOT ALL OF MY POSTS ARE SLICES!!

Why am I just now realizing this?
Why does it feel as if I am reading something brand new?
Why am I just now understanding? 

Something strikes me very funny about this. 
I am so proud to be in my fourth year of participation, 
I feel so experienced and able,
and,
in a single moment of reading Stacey's post, 
I feel like a total beginner.

As my friend Sybil likes to say,
We don't know what we don't know.

Dear Slicing Community, 
thank you for
taking me where I am at, 
embracing each of my posts no matter how far removed they may have been (and may still be) from a classic "slice," and
being patient with my learning.

Let's begin again.

To slicing!



6 comments:

  1. What I love about this is your reflection. Frankly, I see my brain wanderings as slices. Is that ok? I felt bad posting the slice I had today because it wasn't a slice. Sort of but not really. I'll forgive you if you forgive me :)

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    1. I like the idea of calling brain wanderings slices - they are a real part of my day!!

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  2. I'm just an aspiring slicer at this point, but I enjoyed reading this inner monologue.

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    1. Thank you, Deb! Take the plunge and slice!!

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  3. Well, what is "a slice of life" anyway? Can't we each define slicing differently? As a teacher who blogs, I tend to focus on what does and does not work in teaching, too. I decided to participate in the challenge after writing my post this morning. Teaching is story, so is lesson planning, so is reflecting. I recently read Tom Newkirk's fabulous book "Minds Made for Stories," so no matter how you slice it, we're creatures of narrative. We're storytellers, and that's just the way I'm slicing! :-)

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    1. Love that line, "no matter how you slice it, we're creatures of narrative." This will be my muse throughout the month! Thank you!

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