Friday 12 January 2024

Volcanoes erupt at Shire Oak Primary School in January

 Sally Bavage writes:

Can't resist writing of the flow of creativity and the explosion of ideas as Mr Martin's class 3 pupils tackled the idea of writing about volcanoes – as if they actually were one.  An unusual starting point devised by Headingley LitFest's commissioned local poet and author James Nash - and one which gave full vent to the children's imagination. 

 

The use of imagination and the sheer delight in using new and sophisticated vocabulary was extraordinary in a class of youngsters still only seven or eight. Tiny!  Ideas were contributed to group discussions, first drafts written and shared and further thoughts given to edited and shaped versions.  One girl's mum confessed that her daughter had really enjoyed the rehearsals too, enjoying a chance to perform her own words and hone her public-speaking skills. Parents from a near full-turnout agreed that their children had really loved and enjoyed the experience, were immersed in their poetry and had practised at home. “Brilliant!  Just brilliant!” said one mum.  “She has so much more confidence and her use of language has just soared.”

 

In the photo - Teaching assistant Sue Strange, poet James Nash, Headteacher Jane Astrid Devane, Lord Mayor Al Garthwaite


James has such a rapport with these children: they respond with warmth, humour and hard graft.  He wrote his own poem to share with them and confessed to a full school assembly that he thought some of the children's work better than his own. He also coaxed a cripplingly shy youngster to read out his words, a real triumph and part of the value of this project according to teaching assistant Sue Strange. Writing your own poetry is often a gateway to extended writing with confidence, and reading it aloud to a large audience a bonus. Life skills without doubt.

Headteacher Jane Astrid Devane explained that the school uses this work as a stepping stone to introducing more poetry into the curriculum and that she had so valued incorporating this work for the past decade. The school and staff always show a strong commitment to this project, building on the new skills and approaches. 


I've been dormant for a thousand years

 

Buildings break and fall

 

Lava runs down my background

 

This coat of lava trickles down my tummy

 

I'm angry like a buffalo

 

I can feel the earth shaking

 

I erupt.  Bang!  Bang!  Bang!

 

I have a tummy ache and I'm going to vomit!

 

And what of the children? They had “loved thinking of novel ideas,” writing and shaping their work and making such different approaches to the idea. They'd also found out “poems don't have to rhyme, you can write a poem about anything” and you can write it in the first person. They'd found “reading their work out had helped with developing their ideas” and “poems were short stories.” Did I mention they were proud of their increased confidence!

 

Finally, a surprise for the whole audience was that the Lord Mayor of Leeds had come along!  Headingley and Hyde Park Councillor Al Garthwaite listened most carefully to the youngsters, addressed the young audience afterwards and spoke to each class 3 poet individually as she read their work.  A real seal of approval from the local councillors who have always supported our work.

 

 

Thanks are gratefully given to the local Inner North West Area Management Committee who supported the project.




                              



Friday 24 November 2023

Poetry with James Nash at Ireland Wood Primary School


Evacuees

Sally Bavage writes:

Two year six classes (ages 10 to 11) are studying War, and our commissioned poet James Nash – pictured with class teachers Ms Bilioni and Mr Crossley – took up the theme of Evacuees for this poetry project. As deputy head Mrs Green said when introducing the work to the thirty or so parents and visitors who were able to attend the mid-morning final presentations, “Every year we are astounded by the writing, the creativity and the trust that James produces from this transformational project.  You are in for a treat.”  We were.

 

Sixty youngsters read to us from their work, drafted, shared, edited and honed.  A dozen read their whole poem, other just their favourite selection. Think of the logistics of that! Fortunately, school teaching and support staff are hugely supportive of what this project does for these young people and help with achieving order and calm.  Yes, some rattling pieces of paper held in hands shaking with nerves but also some voices raised confidently and proudly even without the use of the microphone.   

 

As one parent confided before the start: “She has absolutely loved it.  She even read out some other poems to me at breakfast this morning.”  Another confessed that his “son was so proud of his poem and was looking forward to performing it.”

 

The deeply empathetic writing started off in a busy city station with young children being evacuated to safety but leaving families and friends.  The youngsters wrote heartfelt descriptions of what they sensed and felt as children from almost a century ago, with fresh and sophisticated vocabulary that made you forget their youth and focus on their engagement. Behaviour or learning difficulties entirely forgotten, they were immersed in the place their writing took them.

 

“I can taste the salty tears in my mouth.”

 

“I feel the embrace of my little sister.”

 

My dad is in a gloomy graveyard, Lying in his deathbed.”

 

My life story now turns another page.”

 

“Sometimes, I want to go to the past.”

 

Confusion, fury, worry and hope; Nothing was perfect anymore.”

 

I can hear my heart beating: thump, thump, thump.”

 

“I can still taste my last meal with mother.”

 

“My life is a new chapter, somewhere I've never been.”

 

I could go on for pages with extracts from the children's work that demonstrate just how closely they entered into the world of these Evacuees.  Ideas spilled out in sharing sessions and were refined into work of which the children were so proud.  As Ms Bilioni said, “We've now got Confidence with a capital C.  My class has been asking me every morning if we are doing poetry. This work makes creative writing accessible to all; James wrote his own exemplar poem at a range of levels to encourage them all that they too could join in.”  And Mr Crossley said, “I'm really looking forward to next year!”

 

And the children?  One girl had enjoyed the sharing of ideas and planning her poem carefully, another young chap had looked forward to performing his work and a third had absolutely exploded with ideas he could see in his mind's eye.  “I'll remember the fun we had” and “It was good to see a poem grown from our first ideas”, as well as finding that poems don't have to rhyme but they have rhythm.  Just where will these young people go with insights like that?

 

November 2023

 


Thanks are given to Leeds City Council's Inner North West area management committee for funding this work once again.













Tuesday 26 September 2023

Linda Marshall's new collection

Sometimes described as Headingley's poet laureate, Linda Marshall is launching HEADINGLEY HULLABALOO on SATURDAY 4 NOVEMBER at HEART in Bennett Road, Leeds 6.

The book is a new collection of poems celebrating the delights and quirks of Headingley past and present. It will be in the Shire Oak Room, arranged café style. You are invited to arrive from 3pm, with the performance beginning at 3.30pm. It's free entry, but donations are welcome to pay for the room.
 
Performers are Maggie Mash and Jane Oakshott (from Trio Literati), with Peter Spafford providing music.
 




 

Tuesday 5 September 2023

Restless Souls by Ronnie Brown - Review

Sally Bavage writes:

Art is in the eye of the beholder, they say. Or in the view of the forensic scientist called in to investigate a puzzling death. Add in an art history lecturer who is under something of a cloud and some complex fraud. Oh, and death threats. You have an interesting debut novel by Ronnie Brown.


Restless Souls follows the fortunes, if his adventures can be so described, of jaded art history lecturer R I Penny, whose witty exploration of the 'painter'  Hertz van Rental didn't amuse management and put him under observation. Add in a mysterious file detailing complex financial transactions he doesn't quite grasp left anonymously in his pigeonhole. Season this mix with some dodgy acquaintances, quite a bit of psychological analysis of painting and its messages, a police investigation that isn't all it seems and an embittered former student who may be stalking our hero. You have a complex narrative that moves along with a cracking pace and some surprising turns of events.

 

The writing style has echoes of Terry Darlington's Narrow Dog to Carcassonne, or Raymond Chandler's Marlowe. Short sentences, elliptical asides and rapid developments move the story along in short chapters that, rather like Dickens, leave you with frequent cliffhangers.

 

References to his colleagues at Beckett polyversity are rarely flattering and in a serving member of staff would begin to look like a long letter of resignation. There are one or two plot holes - why blow up a church? Is the love interest to be followed up? And the psychobabble can be a bit overwhelming towards the finale.

 

However, it is clear that Ronnie Brown knows and loves his artworks, and is a master raconteur. A discussion of this book could lead in many directions!


To buy the book from Waterstones, click here:

 https://www.waterstones.com/book/restless-souls/ronnie-brown/9781803780559

Friday 30 June 2023

Good Luck, Malika!

 Good luck to Malika Booker, whose poem Libation has been shortlisted for this year's Forward Prize for a single poem! Malika has been part of our Poetry in Schools project for seven years, running sessions at Brudenell Primary School. See the write-ups on this blog. Here's the poem:

https://www.forwardartsfoundation.org/forward-prizes-for-poetry/malika-booker-libation/

Tuesday 28 March 2023

Memories in a Suitcase at Brudenell Primary School

 Richard Wilcocks writes:

At the start of the first of three sessions on identity and memories, poet #MalikaBooker spoke about family memories with an enthusiastic class made up of a mixture of nine, ten and eleven year-olds, with their teacher Tom Nutman. Most of them recognised the situation when she read her poem about shopping in Brixton market with her grandma as a child. She followed with another of her poems – ‘Letting Go’ – about a cat that had to be given away when she was born. So did she always write about her early life?

 

“It’s not all about my life,’ she said. “Sometimes it’s about things which haven’t happened and sometimes it’s about a very short moment. Or another person’s whole life! Whatever you’re writing about you’ll have to think about details and imagery.” 



She asked the children what they could see from a window at home. There was a shower of responses – people walking past, cats and dogs, houses, the mosque. “Now try making it easier for people to imagine what you saw. Give more details. Houses built with red bricks? A large, brown, hairy dog? A mosque with a dome? Try using metaphors? Using your five senses?”

 

The rest of the session was devoted to painting pictures in someone’s mind, using descriptive words and comparisons. A scruffy dog? A green dome? Happy, smiling people? A child thin as a pencil? And what about abstractions? What does jealousy taste like? What does love look like?

 

A few days later, during the second session, Malika asked the class to consider the idea that if you had to leave home and couldn’t go back, which five things would you take in a suitcase? ‘Suitcase’ , the lead poem in a collection with the same name by #RogerRobinson * was distributed and read out. The children made lists. Food and entertainment were important practical considerations at first – sandwiches, chocolate bars, bags of lentils, board games – but after Malika’s prompting, the importance of significant memories began to be appreciated. Books of photos. Special friends. Specific moments of happiness with parents, brothers and sisters which are fixed in the brain. Loving relationships.

 

Tom Nutman stepped in to explain that this was going to have a lot to do with work next term on metaphors and that he would follow up the work started with Malika in the next few days. Malika said she was really looking forward to hearing the class’s ‘list poems’ or 'suitcase poems' when she came in for the third and final session, because she had been delighted with the imaginative efforts made so far. She warned the class they would have to be brave. All four adults present - Malika, Tom, myself and Learning Support Assistant Nasira Mirza echoed the warning, following it with reassurances.


  • Suitcase (poetry), Flipped Eye Publishing, 2005. ISBN 978-0954224776

  • The finale came a week later. It took place in the gym. Malika knows a few things about nerves before a performance, so she spent the first fifteen minutes of the rehearsal putting into practice a few of the techniques she has learned over the years. The fledgeling poets had to become spoken word artists. They stood up to plant their feet firmly and take a really deep breath, stepped out front to deliver the first line of their poem in a loud voice to Mr Nutman standing at the far end of the gym and played a hilarious circle game involving throwing an imaginary ball to be caught be a friend.





    The show was like a happy dream. Several children who had said that they just could not go through with it the day before were transformed into confident performers. Nasira explained to me that she had been concerned about one boy who had been flushed and trembling twenty-four hours previously but who had read his poem out with no apparent problems. And the smiling faces proved that the whole business was really enjoyable. Camera phones were in evidence too, pointed by mothers at sons and daughters, by children at friends and by Mr Nutman himself, who operated the school's video camera. This was an experience not to be forgotten in a hurry.






    Tom Nutman, Jill Harland and Nasira Mirza with Malika


    Comments from those present included:


    It is vital for us as educators that we create as many opportunities as possible for our young people to be inspired by and to produce poetry. and to express themselves creatively. Thankyou, Malika! (Headteacher Jill Harland)


    I am so proud of you. The poetry was great and your confidence in speaking in public has grown. (Tom Nutman)


    Young poets' dream! This will be the making of them! (Nasira Mirza)


    They need it for high school confidence. It's huge for them, a massive achievement! (Shaza, parent)


    Thanks are given to Leeds City Council's Inner North West area management committee for funding this work once again.