Teaching Creative Writing in a Foreign Country

I hope you enjoy this blog about  a U.K. citizen teaching Creative Writing in Sri Lanka.

If you read my bio you will see that I have worked as a Creative Writing tutor for adults in the UK. My husband and I retired and came to Sri Lanka for 6 months 7 years ago, now for 3/4 months every year. His voluntary work is in medical research and he has studied snake bite reactions as part of a team improving the care of patients.He is based at Peradeniya University in Kandy – the hill country.

I didn’t want to sit around and I when asked to work at a private school of 3000 girls as a volunteer I was delighted. Feeling ill equipped with a young age group I started with the under 5’s but quickly developed a rapport with the upper school. The little children were so lovable and well behaved. I have always kept in touch. The teachers are hard working, dedicated and underpaid.

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Us as Santa and helper going to school
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Well behaved children in school

Faced with a large class of 9-10 year olds to teach English, Creative Writing came to my rescue. Group work was the answer. English is a vital part of education here. The main languages spoken are Sinhala, Tamil and English. The English language is used everywhere, on road signs and by the poorest of workers. It’s a common language. An English qualification is a  way into a job and  helps you find a marriage partner.

I progressed to teaching GCSE classes and A level English literature. There is a gap of three months between the exams and the next course, I was given a free hand to teach this group of students. I taught what I knew and we worked on writing projects. At the end of my time the school reported a marked improvement in the English of the students. The result was repeat invitations to work in this school over many years. I am happy to have a good relationship with them every time I visit.

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The school concert at a private school where I worked

My next task was to teach teachers, this was fun and an experiment. Rote is the preferred  method of teaching and it works well. The thing about teaching Creative Writing is that it engages the students to a greater degree. They love doing projects and sharing. If they can’t do everything in English I allow them to use their own language but to keep going and keep trying. At the end of a session we look collectively at vocabulary and grammar relevant to their project. This requires new skills from the teachers, they may be caught out on things they don’t know.

Creative Writing is a method of improving  the English of some of the teachers as well as students. Writing creatively  is a skill that cannot be totally used without guidance.

I always respect the culture and never try to change anything. For a country still recovering from civil war, facilities and resources have been in short supply but are improving. Sri Lanka was also a country badly hit by the tsunami. Both events increased the need for orphanages. Children still write about both. They write about the roll of women and  poems about their lives and emotions – this area is where we discuss boundaries and if there should be any. The teachers know their culture and children best and I don’t try and influence in any way, but I make them aware that with new freedoms comes responsibilities for the teacher.

The teacher training I was a part of was videoed  and shown over to teachers. I was invited to run a work shop at a conference weekend for all Sri Lankan teachers in Colombo.

This is about the teaching, there is more to my voluntary work than this. The teachers are wonderful people, I have made such good friends.

I visited a poor state school and threw myself into renovating a library to give the school a heart. The government is now able to put more money into schools and state schools are improving.

Our life here has been dependent on renting a house every time we come. The first one was on the top of a hill with the jungle above. We were closer than I liked to snakes and insects. I have what I call my Sri Lankan hat on when I come here and forget my UK standards of living. That said I love the experience of living alongside the Sri Lankans. The rains came the first year and deluged down our hill for months. There was no doubt we were living in danger of a land slip. When the house was hit by a large boulder. The challenge was on. The hole made way for the jungle life to enter the house. My husband was determined to stay and finish his work, the compromise was that we went to a hotel while the house was fixed. On our return I reacted to every sound. When I heard a thud on the roof I went to investigate and found myself face to face with two 7 foot snakes. I learned afterwards they were not dangerous. I have seen vipers and cobras here but not many. The mosquitos are a bigger threat. Dengue is not uncommon but Malaria has mostly been eradicated. Rabies exists and it is best not to engage with wild animals including the street dogs and cats. Bats and monkeys can also be carriers. I console myself with the thought that there are a lot of Sri Lankan people still alive, on balance we should be. This is not a way of life I would choose if I had the responsiblity of a young family, although families do come here to work.

The food is good, we eat mostly fruit, veg and rice. The numbers of modern restaurants and the variety of food is increasing. We prefer Sri Lankan food, it’s what we are used to here.

Going home to the U.K to friends and family is a real pleasure, I look forward to it for weeks. I see my own culture through different eyes. The consumerism, and the way families and extended families don’t function in the same way are here are obvious. In Sri Lanka the elderly and sick are always cared for in the family homes. This is great when it works but there are old people mistreated as well as those well cared for. Women have to work and cannot always be at home. Family money is shared. Our house maid washes cleans and cooks for us. Her wages keeps five members of her family. When families can’t manage they borrow from the loan people who come around to your door. They pay back at 2% interest. Sickness and disability can wreck a family’s limited finances.

Our tuk tuk driver introduced me to a village where people live in shacks. Here I met a young family with three children. I decided to teach them English and stay in touch at all times. Parents and children are speaking English and the children growing up well. Twice their shack has been washed away in storms, it is now built of breeze blocks but not in a safe position.

Free health care is available to the poor. They can queue up at hospital and see a doctor. Drugs have to be bought, unless you go to the hospital for them.  People buy one or two tablets at a time and give up before a course is finished. If you have an accident you may or may not get repairs to your broken body depending on the cost. When it doesn’t happen then people languish in beds.

I am getting past teaching now and would like to be involved in sponsorship of patients that need false limbs they can’t afford. There are many young and otherwise fit men, who lost limbs in the war. There is some support for them.

Although I plan to get away from teaching and spend my time here writing, this is a country of surprises. I have been asked to teach the young monks at a temple but have preferred to teach someone how to teach them. The internet is great for devising programmes for learning and passing them on. Internet and phone connections are excellent.

I have been talking to an agriculturist about rural education, an area that interests me. The challenge is teaching farmers, especially rice growers, English, to enable them to use the internet and communicate with the wider world.

We visit swimming pools,  I belong to a book club and film club and go on tour – just in case you think our time is all about volunteering.

At the end of my teaching time at a school I gave them a Creative Writing Cup to be presented to the student with the best ideas – not the best grammar. This encouraged a different set of students. Every year book prizes are awarded in my name. What an honour.

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Winner of the 2016 Creative writing prize

If you have enjoyed this brief blog about the past seven visits  of our life in Sri Lanka, you can read my husband’s blogs on Chandlers Ford today. http://tinyurl.com/ze92jfq This is about the library I renovated in a state school but search around his blogs and you will find more about Sri Lanka.

This is a limited view of what we do, I could write a book, but not yet. If you have any questions, please ask.

In quiet moments I write for myself. My first novel Marriage, a Journey and a Dog is a romantic comedy best described as women’s fiction . Writing is what I enjoy doing in my quiet moments. It’s great to know people in Sri Lanka have read and enjoyed my book, mainly expats. http://tinyurl.com/zexovoo

I have been able to advise expats about self publishing a book and about how the traditional publishing industry works. This puts me in contact with amazing and interesting people.

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Many classes in one space

Henri Marcel. French artist 1938 – 1996

I have been asked about Henri Marcel, the French artist I quote in Marriage, a Journey and a Dog..

Henri Marcel is remembered for his quotations as well as his art. He was a part of the cubism movement that changed the face of art.

Pablo Picasso was credited with cubism’s creation, but there are other examples of this style of art. As with all artists and creative people there is a reliance on what you have learnt and your environment, mixed with your own creativity. It was Picasso that brought cubism to the forefront in art.

This is a link to cubism art pictures – Cubism Art

I came across these in Le Louvre. I’m not sure how old they are but they are described as ancient. 33-P100092134-P1000922

George Keyt 1901 – 1993,  is a famous Sri Lankan artist and as far as it is known he had no contact with Picasso and his associates.

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George Keyt

George Keyt is worth knowing about – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Keyt

Henri Marcel was a part of the  cubism movement, creating his own distinguished style – hidden in many ways, but a great  discovery if you find him.

Quotes about Henri Marcel in Marriage, a Journey and a Dog.

This is where it all began.

This is when I realised what my life could be

                                     Henri Marcel. French Artist 1938-1996

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Once outside on the pavement, I notice a small house, squeezed between the shops, on the wall there is a brass plaque to Henri Marcel. I have a book about him from a charity shop. He painted pictures then ripped them up, repositioned them and painted the new picture, similar to Picasso and cubism. The colours he used were bold and the reconstructed paintings vibrant. Some of his paintings are of people; others of buildings. So he lived here for twenty years until he died in 1996.

‘I am always doing what I thought I couldn’t do because I learn something’ is the quote under his name.

“Yes, Henri!” I say out loud. I mustn’t let Gerry see me talking to myself, and clasping my hands with agreement!

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Alan might offend me when I’m vulnerable, so as much as he might be useful I decide to try this one on my own and hope I’ve benefitted something from my one and only past experience of cycling.

‘I am always doing what I thought I couldn’t do because I learn something’ I reflect on Henri Marcel’s words. ‘Remember Natalie, you made it through France and Spain’. I pinch myself at the thought.

As his paintings are held in private galleries they are not available on google. Maybe, one day there will be an exhibition.

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“To tell the truth is often distracting, Make what you will of me.”  Henri Marcel.

The School Library Project Part 1

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The ledger for 5000= books. Many of them unreadable.

This school in Sri Lanka is over 100 years old and tumbling down in places. In a drab and difficult building I have decided to make a library space that is bright.

Although the space is on the small side the problems are big.

All books in the school have to be entered into a ledger. No book can be thrown away without government official approval. This should happen once a year and the number of books that can be thrown away is limited. Therefore old unreadable books remain in the limited space for a long time.

Old newspapers are collected here because they can be sold. In the damp atmosphere of the rainy season everywhere is damp and mildew grows on the walls and ceilings and of course, the books.

I am going to try and create a small oasis for learning in spite of the obstacles.

The painting is happening and we are having fun.

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Yet more books and no where for them to go.

The Empty Nest Syndrome

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When family members leave home, they leave their feathers behind them. Stuff in the attic, bottles in the bathroom. Remnants of the smells of their existence in the house. Sounds good and bad. When kids leave home, parents pass away or leave for a different life themselves or your partner decides they are happier elsewhere, You’re faced with remnants and questions.

You may know the changes that are coming, but not expect the impact. It’s no good brooding and wishing. You need to build a new life.

Preparation is good see  Empty Nest Syndrome Wikipedia

Start, even if you choose the wrong things you won’t get anywhere unless you start actively looking. Be prepared that your first choices won’t work. Keep going. Don’t get sucked into things you don’t really want to be doing.

What is your life?

What is your relationship with the person you may still be living with?

Grandparenting may happen and with overload. Your life is back to the old normal except you are more tired. You start to complain about not having time to  do the things you want to  or have always wanted to do. Before you know it, the empty nest feeling is back as they go to school and start to follow their many interests.

The many nativity plays you had to go to have been replaced with an hour at a rowdy birthday party. Now, what were those fun things you always wanted to do?

If reading is one of things, then try Marriage a Journey and a Dog . Life changes for Natalie at 40 when her unplanned empty nest  comes. .Marriage a Jounrey and a Dog

Flying in the Pyrenees

Clip #14  This will give you an idea of the adrenaline rush Natalie (heroine)  must have experienced. Look this up This is the gliding centre in the Pyrenees. Try YouTube clips and you will see how amazing the experience is.

A photo of the gliding in the Pyrenees experience  P1010245

Reading Club Notes

Reading Clubs have sent me good feedback for my book. There are discussion suggestions in the back of the book. Some serious; some fun.

One reading group decided to wear something turquoise because Natalie describes her life as turquoise.

BOOK CLUB NOTES

 

Life changes at forty for Natalie. She expects to remain in her comfort zone in a sleepy market town. She has a job as a bingo caller, a daughter preparing for college and an elderly father making his own life. She has been married to Gerry for eighteen years but he loves sport more than her.

Gerry has a cycling accident in France. Natalie and her little dog Spike go to collect him. Poor map-reading skills take her on a journey through France and Spain. She finds a new self, but has to return home.

Emotions run high as Natalie tries to make a difficult marriage work. At her fortieth, birthday party, comes a painful revelation. Now she is released into a new exciting life of love and marriage. Her new lifestyle attracts media acclaim and celebrity status.

Natalie’s journey brings her laughter, tears, and surprises.

DISCUSSIONS

Was Gerry a likeable character?

If Gerry and Natalie had talked more, could it have stopped the demise of their marriage

Why was Gerry unfaithful?

Should Natalie have tried to keep her marriage going?

If Natalie had not gone on her journey what would her life have been like?

What reasons caused a lack of self-confidence for Natalie in the early part of the book?

To what extent did being unable to have more children make Natalie less valued in her own eyes?

How much did the divorce affect Katy?

Natalie describes this period of her life as turquoise; if you described a phase of your life by a colour what would it be?

Is travelling alone a good or a bad thing, and does it matter what age you are when you go?

Marriage, A Journey and A Dog

Today I received my first feedback from a reading group. It was a great feeling to know that people had read my book and continued with the reading club notes at the back. I was surprised, as it is still only an ebook. A day preparing the cover for the paperback is scheduled for April and the paperback will be available May 2015.

Many debut ebooks still have the odd mistakes. It is inevitable when you are your own editor, but there are good stories around that would benefit from the odd tweak but worth reading.

When I berated myself for a spelling mistake in 90.000 words I realised that the other 89,999 could be right. The best news is that readers are enjoying the story and I can’t ask more than that.

I also heard that 2 more groups are waiting for the paperback. Hardly the thousands of a successful…

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Fiat Cinquecento

Like Natalie's car
Like Natalie’s car

This famous little car, produced in Italy, has become a cult car, especially talked about in France.

//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiat_Cinquecento

I fell in love with this little car when I was choosing a car for my character Natalie to drive through France and Spain.

There’s a couple of amusing YouTube clips from top gear  The second clip starts with the mini but ends with the Cinquecento. It shows a young Jeremy Clarkson.

I think the following of this little car comes from the fact that it was fun and a challenge. Must watch these clips.

.Cinquecento You tube   Top Gear Cinquecento 1994

This car has a character of its own in  my book, and that was fun to create.

Venus de Milo

Look up Venus de Milo  It’s fun if you haven’t seen this sculpture before and if you have it is worth a another visit.  In fact Paris should be on everyone’s travel list always. I love Le Louvre, staring at this sculpture again and writing her into my book. If you would like to travel the journey of Natalie this is a great place to be.  
Natalie stared at this goddess of love and wanted her to touch her life. She did, but not in the way she expected.
Marriage a Journey and a Dog is in the printing stage now and I will update this blog as soon as it is available. A new ebook will soon be on all ebook platforms.
Strange how you write a book and wonder if it will sell. Now the orders are happening, I just want to know that readers enjoy it.
Looking up the artistic places mentioned, traveling through France and Spain and oddly enough, wearing turquoise to reading clubs are adding to the fun of the reading experience.
My photo of Venus de Milo
My photo of Venus de Milo

Creative Writing in a school in Sri Lanka.

May is the month when the Creative Writing cup is presented at the school where I worked as a volunteer teacher. I created the Creative Writing competition with associated book prizes, before leaving the school. Every year I get to read the entries and they never cease to amaze me.

They are written in English which is their second language. In the school of 2000 girls, English lessons start at age 4. If the girls don’t speak English well it is difficult for them to get a job or to marry. As an English person I was lucky to be valued by the school.

My day could be spent reading stories and singing with 4 year olds, teaching ‘A’ level English literature, or anything in between. My favourite times were spent supporting the multi-talented teachers as they worked to produce their concerts.

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4 year olds trying to stay focused
5 year olds dancing their national dances perfectly
5 year olds dancing their national dances perfectly

Now I look forward to reading this year’s writing competition entries. For the first three years, many entries featured the tsunami, an experience deeply etched in the minds of those who experienced it, especially some of the orphaned children who attend the school.

What was obvious was the discipline behind their thinking and their family structures. You can’t afford to make social mistakes, it can cost you and your family their future. In large classes, learning by rote has been the main teaching method.

On my last visit, I was teaching teachers to encourage creativity with language skills, and we discussed the pros and cons of this freedom.

We return to Sri Lanka in September where I will be working again and visiting my many friends there. I will also be taking the opportunity to push ahead with my second book ‘The Trinket Wife’. In the next few weeks, Marriage, A Journey and A Dog will be available again as an ebook and as a paperback. I didn’t realise publishing can take so long and be such hard work.