If you are at AWP 2020 in San Antonio, please stop by our panel, which features five community college professors from across the country (California, Kansas, North Carolina, and Texas) sharing approaches and activities to involve these students in writing and cultivate their often underrepresented voices. Please see the panel description below.
AWP 2020 Conference
San Antonio, Texas
Henry B. González Convention Center
March 4–7, 2020
Nurturing Future Danticats, Nabokovs, and Vuongs:
Engaging Multilingual & ESL College Students in Creative Writing
Panel Number: S225
Date/Time: 1:45pm – 3:00pm on Saturday March 7, 2020
Location: Room 210A, Henry B. González Convention Center, Meeting Room Level
Multilingual and ESL students, a sizable segment of college populations, are traditionally underrepresented in writing courses. How do we help them develop their voices? How can we tailor writing pedagogies to their needs? Community college panelists from around the country (California, Kansas, North Carolina, and Texas) will offer various modalities that help engage these college students in creative writing, including teaching writing and publishing to migrant farmworkers, utilizing poetry translation in multilingual classrooms, refocusing grading policies to foster student creativity, and writing contest and journal inclusion.
Background
Non-native and multilingual speakers constitute a large segment and often are a majority on community college campuses these days. Traditionally, colleges offered concurrent curricular tracks leading to Freshman Composition (transfer-level English course), which serves as a benchmark for community college graduation and university transfer, as well as a pre-requisite for most literature and writing courses.
Despite different paths to language proficiency, in linguistic terms, second language acquisition, at the advanced stage and in formal learning settings, in many aspects, merges with first language acquisition in many aspects (Igoudin 2017). Reasons for such convergence include:
- Advanced SL learners are bilingual, sharing, at the very least, beginning and intermediate grammar and a wide range of vocabulary – shared lexicogrammar.
- Native English population in community colleges is largely bilingual too.
- The line between these two populations is blurred, leading to, for example, the Generation 1.5 phenomenon.
One other unfortunate commonality among these multilingual students is their assumed lack of ability – perceived both internally and externally – to express themselves creatively in English, leading to their underrepresentation in creating writing courses and activities.
Their English language proficiency appears to be an obstacle, but is it really?
Historically, multilingual writers flourished in English: from Chinua Achebe, Joseph Conrad, Kahlil Gibran, Vladimir Nabokov, or William Saroyan of the past to Edwidge Danticat, Junot Diaz, Masha Gessen, or Ocean Vuong of today. What can be done to engage these new generations of multilingual speakers in English writing?
This Panel’s Contribution
The panelists will share successful strategies from around the country to destigmatize these writers’ voices and to engage them in creative writing.
Some of the questions proposed for discussion are:
- What are multilingual students’ challenges in engaging in creative writing?
- What practices can be used to help them overcome such challenges and start writing?
- How do they perceive writing in English vs. how do the others perceive their writing?
- What does it mean to have a voice?
- How do these students’ voices fit in today’s sociopolitical and literary environments?
Panel Participants
Emma Burcart is a graduate of the Antioch University Los Angeles MFA program. She teaches composition and creative writing at a community college in rural North Carolina, where she also heads up the creative writing club on campus.
Marlys Cervantes serves as Department Chair of Humanities & Communication and director of the Creative Writing Program at Cowley College in Arkansas City, Kansas. She teaches literature and writing courses, as well as serving as co-director of the Multi-Cultural Scholars Program. Contact: marlys.cervantes@cowley.edu
Sharon Coleman teaches creative writing at Berkeley City College. She directs the journal, Milvia Street. She’s a contributing editor at Poetry Flash, a member of the Northern California Book Reviewers, and a curator the reading series Lyrics & Dirges. She was nominated twice for a Pushcart Prize.
Daniel Rios-Lopera holds a degree in Audiovisual Communications and a Creative Writing MFA from the University of Texas in El Paso. He´s a Spanish, English, and Creative Writing teacher in different universities in El Paso area. Daniel also serves as Director of Memorias del Silencio, Creative Writing Workshops for Immigrant Farmworkers
Panel Moderator
Lane Igoudin, MA, PhD, is a non-fiction writer and Associate Professor of English/ESL at Los Angeles City College, where he teaches writing, reading, and linguistics, and a recent Andrew W. Mellon Fellow with the Humanities Division of UCLA. His memoir Born in the Shadow of the Court is under contract with the University of Wisconsin Press. Contact: laneigoudin@gmail.com