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Student-centered instruction is the buzzword among today's
educators, yet the teaching of writing is still very top-down.
Student-centered should mean student-inspired, and that's where
Keys to Inspiration comes in. The path to a writer's truth always
starts with an emotion, and almost all forms of writing contain at
least a trace of emotional DNA. This book shows teachers how to
align emotion with subject matter, and it offers them lessons and
projects (from challenging writing exercises to larger projects,
such as memoir, research reports, and editorials) that resonate
with young authors. While Keys to Inspiration focuses sharply on
content, it contains an instructive mechanics section and an
Appendix of unique word lists (emotion-related words, themed
spelling lists, and alternatives to "went" and "said," to name a
few), as well as a few grammar worksheets. Once motivated, young
authors must learn to describe with detail, meddle with metaphor,
and mind their mechanics. Veteran writing instructor Steve Ford
offers many lessons and exercises that will polish students'
narrative skills, and he alerts teachers to the common spelling,
punctuation, and grammar mistakes that young writers need to learn
to avoid.
Student-centered instruction is the buzzword among today's
educators, yet the teaching of writing is still very top-down.
Student-centered should mean student-inspired, and that's where
Keys to Inspiration comes in. The path to a writer's truth always
starts with an emotion, and almost all forms of writing contain at
least a trace of emotional DNA. This book shows teachers how to
align emotion with subject matter, and it offers them lessons and
projects (from challenging writing exercises to larger projects,
such as memoir, research reports, and editorials) that resonate
with young authors. While Keys to Inspiration focuses sharply on
content, it contains an instructive mechanics section and an
Appendix of unique word lists (emotion-related words, themed
spelling lists, and alternatives to "went" and "said," to name a
few), as well as a few grammar worksheets. Once motivated, young
authors must learn to describe with detail, meddle with metaphor,
and mind their mechanics. Veteran writing instructor Steve Ford
offers many lessons and exercises that will polish students'
narrative skills, and he alerts teachers to the common spelling,
punctuation, and grammar mistakes that young writers need to learn
to avoid.
"The story of Steve Ford's realisation is unusual. One night in his
room in 1999 there was a total falling away of all identification
as the personal self. It was unusual in the sense that Steve had no
prior experience of spiritual seeking. He had neither teacher nor
guru, no paradigm which would explain what had happened. All
vestiges of personality were suddenly gone, there was direct and
immediate seeing as and from no-thing, from the absolute. Such
accounts exist within the spiritual literature and in each case
there appears to follow a period of relative dysfunctionality and
subsequent reintegration such that what has happened may be
understood and conveyed within the world of form. In Steve's case
this took the form of an exhaustive investigation in consciousness
which he eventually came to refer to as The Living Process. He
explains that realisation is just the beginning and unless
subsequent investigation into the nature of consciousness takes
place there is re-identification and consequently self-orientation
around no-thing. Many contemporary teachers and their students
relate in this way. So what follows in this introductory book is
the story of Steve's early life, his realisation, enquiry and
integration in consciousness, and some interactions that have taken
place with some of those who have made their way to be with Steve.
"The story of Steve Ford's realisation is unusual. One night in his
room in 1999 there was a total falling away of all identification
as the personal self. It was unusual in the sense that Steve had no
prior experience of spiritual seeking. He had neither teacher nor
guru, no paradigm which would explain what had happened. All
vestiges of personality were suddenly gone, there was direct and
immediate seeing as and from no-thing, from the absolute. "Such
accounts exist within the spiritual literature and in each case
there appears to follow a period of relative dysfunctionality and
subsequent reintegration such that what has happened may be
understood and conveyed within the world of form. "In Steve's case
this took the form of an exhaustive investigation in consciousness
which he eventually came to refer to as The Living Process. He
explains that realisation is just the beginning and unless
subsequent investigation into the nature of consciousness takes
place there is re-identification and consequently self-orientation
around no-thing. Many contemporary teachers and their students
relate in this way. So what follows in this introductory book is
the story of Steve's early life, his realisation, enquiry and
integration in consciousness, and some interactions that have taken
place with some of those who have made their way to be with Steve."
-From the Foreword by Nathan Gill
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