MURFREESBORO — Young people across Middle Tennessee who enjoy reading and
writing can add to their summer adventures by registering now for MTSU’s annual
Youth Writers’ Camps, set June 8-19.
Students who’ll be in
third to 11th grades can spend two weeks learning to “read like writers” and to
tell stories to others with the help of the Middle Tennessee Writing Project.
The Kids’ Camp for
third- through fifth-graders will be held at MTSU from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Monday-Thursday,
while the Teen Camp for grades five to 11 will be held at Stones River National
Battlefield on the same days and times.
Registration costs
are $200 for new campers and $175 for returning participants.
The Youth Writers’
Camps feature writing-related activities to encourage campers to exercise their
creative energy in composing stories, memoirs, comics, songs, poems and more.
Local teachers with
the Writing Project lead the camps, encouraging students to explore different
writing styles and topics and work with their peers and teachers to become more
confident in their own writing, said Dr. Ellen Donovan, director of the Middle
Tennessee Writing Project and a professor of English at MTSU.
This year’s campers
will enjoy a special visit and workshop with poet and filmmaker Matthew Brown,
a lecturer in MTSU’s Department of English who works regularly with K-12 writers
and founded the MTSU Writers Corps, a creative writing group of student
veterans.
During camp sessions,
the participants will play word games, write daily, learn to give and receive
feedback on their projects and publish their chosen pieces in a camp anthology.
Each student will
receive a camp T-shirt, a writer’s notebook, a daily morning snack and a copy
of the camp writing anthology as part of their registration fees. Campers
should bring their own lunches each day, organizers say.
Campers and parents
can get more information and find a downloadable application form at http://www.middletnwritingproject.org/youth-writers-camps.
A limited number of scholarships also are available for campers; you can learn
more by contacting the Middle Tennessee Writing Project office at 615-898-5981.
You can learn more
about Brown at his website, http://www.matthewbrownpoetry.com.
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.
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