Sunday, August 29, 2010
St James Aranui, Christchurch Writing Group
Friday, August 27, 2010
St James School Writing Group
Monday, August 23, 2010
We are on a roll......
St James School, Aranui, Christchurch
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Feedback from our stories
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Day 3 St James School, Aranui
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Second Visit
Monday, August 9, 2010
Second day at St James School Aranui
Gavin Bishop
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Gavin Bishop Visit To St James School
On Monday Gavin Bishop began the first session of coaching a group of Room 3 children with their writing. The children were very excited about the visit as over the past two weeks the class had read many of Gavin's books. In pairs they created a diorama that related to a specific book that Gavin had written with a focus on their favourite page from the book. All the children in the group Gavin worked with had also written a creative piece of writing in their individual draft books about the St James edible garden.
Sunday, August 1, 2010
ST JAMES, ARANUI 2/8/10 First Session
The students of St James School in Aranui, Christchurch, and I spent our first Creative Coaching Writing session together this morning. After a rousing powhiri in Samoan and Maori the small group of children that I am going to work with over the next few weeks joined me in the library. Today's session was mainly an opportunity to get to know one another and to find out what our expectations are of each other. The main purpose of our time together is to write and design a book on making an edible garden. Most of the students in the school have had experience of doing this and there are some good examples of raised vegetable gardens in the school grounds. Some members of the group have ideas for fantasy stories that involve gardening and we might be able to incorporate one or more of these into our final book. This could be a challenge and might prove to be too difficult but if it is successful it could be an interesting mix.
We finished the session at 12.30pm and I left the group with some research tasks that included finding ways of making compost, ways of sowing seed and finding Samoan and Maori words and beliefs associated with gardening.
We will meet again for another morning session on Monday 9th August.