Relaxing in an Adirondack chair outside the distinctive
yellow buildings at the Bread Loaf School of English, I soaked in the atmosphere
of my surroundings while contemplating the excellent blog posts I would write
following my visit to Vermont. I returned
home over a week ago and--Nope, nada, nothing.
My weekly blog post didn’t happen.
A number of excuses could be to blame, but ultimately, I just wasn’t
satisfied with my attempts to write about my amazing experience. Since I didn’t want to let the occasion slide
without noting it as part of my own learning (to muse) experience, I decided to
share pictures and a few anecdotes.
When my invitation to spend three days at the Bread Loaf
School of English arrived in my inbox, I immediately grew excited knowing the
opportunity would allow me a chance to renew, refresh, and relax. This is one of those times when I felt proud
to represent my state in conversations about teachers and professional
learning. The Bread Loaf Teacher Network
arranged for me to stay in Maple during my three day visit.
Since I thrive on conversations, my appointment with the
directors was a highlight for me. Strategizing
about how we can create more opportunities for Kentucky teachers to be involved
with Bread Loaf was thrilling because I know this means more teachers will have
the opportunity to learn from distinguished professors, to hone their own close
reading skills, to create digital literacy projects, and to participate in collaborative
exchanges with fellow educators from around the nation and around the world.
Knowing my interest in English academics and digital
literacies, Kentucky’s coordinator of the Bread Loaf Teacher Network (BLTN) worked
with the director of the Bread Loaf School of English and the Director of the
Bread Loaf Teacher Network to design an energizing itinerary for me. We practiced our own close reading skills in a
modern British and American poetry class where we discussed poems by Robert
Lowell and Geoffrey Hill. I heard
presentations by BLTN teachers during a network meeting--these presentations
focused on how youth in English classrooms link literature to current events
and public service using the digital literacies they bring to school.
At Bread Loaf there is a literal breaking of bread and connecting
with others around meals served by Bread Loaf students in the Bread Loaf dining
hall. My hosts arranged for me to dine
the first night with BL faculty and to enjoy other meals with groups of students
who are English teachers during the school year. The conversations were an excellent way for
me to learn more about the potential for leveraging the voice of Bread Loaf
teachers (who see themselves as agents of change) in our state.
I’m grateful for my three day
retreat to the Bread Loaf School of English nestled in the Green Mountains of
Vermont. I feel rejuvenated, relaxed, and reconnected.