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A writer's workshop is an unusual experience for anyone who hasn't undergone the process before. Here, what to expect from the experience and how to participate.
Students enrolling in college level (and sometimes even high school) creative writing classes need to be prepared for the writers' workshop. The workshop is often an important part of the creative writing classroom. What is a Writers' Workshop?The word "workshop" sometimes conjures up images of hammers and saws, but a writers' workshop is something very different. While there is much creating and perfecting happening in a writers' workshop, the only tools being used are pencils and brains. Creative writing workshops actually began in 1936 at the University of Iowa. The university developed-and is well-known for-its Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and most creative writing classroom workshops are modeled after the Iowa classrooms. Students who have participated in a peer review in a composition class will be familiar with the idea of the workshop, even though the finer points are different. How Does a Writers' Workshop Work?Basically, the workshop is comprised of students. While every instructor runs her creative writing class a little differently, many of these basic ideas are the same from one class to the next. Each student offers his workshop piece to the class. Every student writes something creative (such as a poem or short story, but it depends on the instructor guidelines or the particular class) and makes copies for everyone else in the class. Each student then takes a turn sharing his writing. When it is a particular student’s turn, she reads the poem or story aloud. Then all other students offer suggestions or comments about the poem, as well as writing suggestions on the student’s paper. The instructor’s comments are offered last, not because the instructor is necessarily an authority, but because the instructor doesn’t wish to taint others’ opinions. The most difficult part of the workshop is that the student whose work is being critiqued does not speak, whether to offer a defense or explanation. The student is expected to be silent throughout the critique. Students who are critiquing the work are meant to offer constructive suggestions but are expected to be respectful. After everyone critiques the work verbally, the student collects her papers so that she can revise her work based on the suggestions she received. Writer Workshop GuidelinesWriters will probably be expected to follow most, if not all, of these guidelines:
Reader Workshop GuidelinesWriters are also readers and, as such, will likely need to follow most of these suggestions:
Using the Workshop to Aid RevisionThe ultimate goal of the workshop is to perfect one's writing. A writer should take the suggestions to heart but know that he is, of course, the only person who knows what suggestions will work best for his revision. It's usually best to listen to the comments of his peers and read the written comments and then-if possible-set the piece aside for a few days. Then, when he's ready to revise, it's best for him to conjure up in his head what ideas from the workshop continue to resonate with him. Most likely, those are the suggestions he should use when rewriting. Related article: Creative Writing-Revision Matters: Techniques to Polish a Novel or Short Story
The copyright of the article Participating in a Creative Writing Workshop in Writing Fiction is owned by Cynthia Jones-Shoeman. Permission to republish Participating in a Creative Writing Workshop in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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