FOR RELEASE: April 26, 2013
EDITORIAL CONTACT:
Dr.
Ellen Donovan, 615-898-5981 or ellen.donovan@mtsu.edu
MURFREESBORO — Young people across the Midstate with a flair for writing
— and a love for reading — are invited to MTSU’s annual Youth Writers’ Camps
June 10-20 on the university’s Murfreesboro campus.
Students who’ve
finished fourth through 11th grades can spend two weeks learning to “read like
writers” and then use their pencils and keyboards to tell stories to others
with the help of the Middle Tennessee Writing Project.
The camps — one for
younger children and one for teenagers — will be held at MTSU Monday through
Thursday, June 10-20, from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. each day.
Registration costs
are $200 for new campers and $175 for returning participants, and the deadline
to register is Wednesday, May 15.
The Youth Writers’
Camps are led by local teachers with the Writing Project who encourage students
to explore different writing styles and topics and work with their peers and
teachers to become more confident in their own writing, organizers said.
“Campers really enjoy
the opportunity to have fun with their writing," said Dr. Ellen Donovan,
director of the Middle Tennessee Writing Project and a professor of English at
MTSU.
"Budding poets,
novelists, comic book makers and songwriters get a chance to work on projects,
try new ideas and strategies and learn the same techniques used by professional
writers.”
This year’s campers
will enjoy an “Authors’ Celebration" and a special visit with Candie
Moonshower, author of the award-winning novel “The Legend of Zoey." Each student
also will receive a camp T-shirt, a writer’s notebook, a daily morning snack
and a writing anthology.
Campers and parents
can get more information and find a downloadable application form at http://www.middletnwritingproject.org/camp-info.
The Middle Tennessee
Writing Project serves the greater Middle Tennessee region as one of more than 200
networked sites that form the National Writing Project, a professional
development effort for teachers of kindergarten through college-aged students.
The MTWP focuses on
improving writing instruction, helping teachers use writing as an effective
teaching strategy in other areas, and developing teacher leadership to reform
and improve education.
—30—
MTSU is committed to developing a community devoted to
learning, growth and service. We hold these values dear, and there’s a simple
phrase that conveys them: “I am True Blue.” Learn more at
www.mtsu.edu/trueblue. For MTSU news anytime, visit www.MTSUNews.com.
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