Wednesday, July 28, 2010
A Great Cause
We know it's important to you that SELI Young Writers clubs continue to encourage JSS students to write. Now there's a way you can make sure that happens! AND, to make sure the new clubs being opened in the Northern Province will be supported with in-servicing visits. You can make your contribution at http://www.causes.com/causes/509925?recruiter_id=143246679. Check it out!
Saturday, June 12, 2010
You can read them, too!
A new book, Fostering Young Writers in Sierra Leone, edited by Jacqueline Leigh, makes it possible for you to read the writing of SELI's Young Writers clubs. Click the link here, or buy it on Amazon.com!
Fostering Young Writers in Sierra Leone is a collection of personal experiences of students in process-writing clubs in six schools in Freetown. After carrying out the writing process repeatedly on their chosen topics these students have come to see themselves, collectively, as authors. Readers gain insight into the society in which these children are growing up, and into the courage with which the students' voices leap from the pages. A foreword by the editor provides detail about the clubs, and the postscript explains where these writers might go from here, drawing on insights from James Moffett's work at the National Writing Project. All profits from the sale of this book support the writing programs of the Sentinel English Language Institute, the public charity conducting Young Writers clubs in Sierra Leone.
Fostering Young Writers in Sierra Leone is available now at https://www.createspace.com/3458058. We're also sending out complimentary copies in appreciation and recognition of donations of $50 or more to the Sentinel English Language Institute. Do let us know if you'd like to contribute at writing.SELI@yahoo.com.!
Fostering Young Writers in Sierra Leone is a collection of personal experiences of students in process-writing clubs in six schools in Freetown. After carrying out the writing process repeatedly on their chosen topics these students have come to see themselves, collectively, as authors. Readers gain insight into the society in which these children are growing up, and into the courage with which the students' voices leap from the pages. A foreword by the editor provides detail about the clubs, and the postscript explains where these writers might go from here, drawing on insights from James Moffett's work at the National Writing Project. All profits from the sale of this book support the writing programs of the Sentinel English Language Institute, the public charity conducting Young Writers clubs in Sierra Leone.
Fostering Young Writers in Sierra Leone is available now at https://www.createspace.com/3458058. We're also sending out complimentary copies in appreciation and recognition of donations of $50 or more to the Sentinel English Language Institute. Do let us know if you'd like to contribute at writing.SELI@yahoo.com.!
Friday, April 23, 2010
Writers All!
SELI is now sponsor of "Storytelling," a noon radio program on the nonprofit FM 96.0 community station, Voice of the Peninsula Mountains (this is the new station building, in Tombo).
Each weekday members from the listening communities of Sattia, Tombo and Kent along the Freetown Peninsula tell traditional stories in one of five languages spoken in the area. A copy of each program is retained for SELI, and SELI is asking that they also write down these stories in five ledgers, one for each language.
SELI is also paying tutors from its Tutor Registry to provide three lessons that will teach literate adults to write in their primary languages. The first lessons are taking place this week: a certified Mende tutor is teaching someone to write in Kisi. Sure, the teacher does not speak Kisi, and sure, Mende is a Mande language, and Kisi is an Atlantic-Congo language. But it's working: the student feels equipped and energized and he has begun writing in Kisi!
Is this writing perfect? Are the writers using orthographic rules that experts would approve? Do all languages in Sierra Leone have established written orthographies? No. But we whose primary language is English tend to forget that it is only in the very recent past that our written rules have developed. What if Shakespeare had refrained from writing because there was no dictionary to consult? Even today, do writers worry about perfection in their first, second, or fifth drafts? Here's to the written voices of all these potential poets, storytellers, and novelists in Sierra Leone!
Let their publishers worry about the final product!

SELI is also paying tutors from its Tutor Registry to provide three lessons that will teach literate adults to write in their primary languages. The first lessons are taking place this week: a certified Mende tutor is teaching someone to write in Kisi. Sure, the teacher does not speak Kisi, and sure, Mende is a Mande language, and Kisi is an Atlantic-Congo language. But it's working: the student feels equipped and energized and he has begun writing in Kisi!
Is this writing perfect? Are the writers using orthographic rules that experts would approve? Do all languages in Sierra Leone have established written orthographies? No. But we whose primary language is English tend to forget that it is only in the very recent past that our written rules have developed. What if Shakespeare had refrained from writing because there was no dictionary to consult? Even today, do writers worry about perfection in their first, second, or fifth drafts? Here's to the written voices of all these potential poets, storytellers, and novelists in Sierra Leone!
Let their publishers worry about the final product!
Saturday, April 3, 2010
Ballanta's Course in Performing Arts and Media
SELI is again involved in developing and delivering the language arts syllabus for the Ballanta Academy of Music's course in Performing Arts and Media, which will be resuscitated in October following a year's break if the Academy can muster enough enrollment. You can see last year's students here in a playwriting session.
This is a vocational course for post-BECE (junior secondary) students that offers music, drama and acting for screen, dance, studio engineering, and film/digital media. Sierra Leone very much needs more vocational options for post-BECE students, but the new programme needs enrollment to make it happen. In its new form, subjects are available in modules, to take in any order, to pick or not choose, or to take either intensively or spaced out over time, along with the required language arts and business math. The language arts syllabus is standards-based, and assessed primarily through real-life, contextual tasks. Ballanta is holding an orientation for potential students on May 22nd. We'll be there!

Thursday, April 1, 2010
Health Unlimited, Sierra Leone

SELI has conducted the 8th of 12 writing workshops with the staff of Health Unlimited Sierra Leone, now called Health Poverty Action, in Murray Town.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010
International Mother Language Day 2010

On 21st of February, 2010, the Sentinel English Language Institute (SELI) celebrated the 11th anniversary of UNESCO's International Mother Language Day, which promotes the viability and diversity of languages and culture.


Sunday, February 14, 2010
We've Added Journals to our Club

The Young Writers club that had moved to the SELI facility a year ago, is now back in Services Junior Secondary School, Wilberforce. We're going strong! Here you see a content conference, and editing with dictionaries.

There are sixteen round
holes in the classroom window.
They bring fresh air in.
Six rice bags standing
to separate the two classrooms.
The sticks hold them up.
We're grateful for recent donations from individuals to SELI that enabled us to buy additional materials for these clubs, such as files and markers to keep the students' drafts organized.
Saturday, December 5, 2009
SELI Visits Clubs

Three additional process writing clubs! Here we see boys from the Albert Academy Junior Secondary School rehearsing new topics during my visit, and we see Government Model JSS club conducting a content conference.


Thursday, November 19, 2009
Young Writers Clubs



Club members find that analyzing their life experiences involves exploring their cultural backgrounds. Club leaders try to build confidence in the students, a community of learners, and a positive experience with teachers. We believe that this is the way to nurture responsible freedom of expression.
Friday, September 11, 2009
Leading Young Writers in Progress

Our junior secondary school teachers from five schools in Freetown (Gov't. Model JSS, Gov't. Rokel JSS, FSSG, UMSSG, and Albert Academy) have completed 3 weeks of their 4 week workshop and are looking forward to sharing their enthusiasm about writing with students in their school Young Writers clubs.


Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)