Student Outlook -- Kellie Brownell
It is the common practice among elementary school teachers to
discipline their students into writing within the lines and in accordance
with the Palmer handwriting standards. This widely practiced tradition of
concentrating on how, as opposed to what, is being written seems to
impede, rather than nurture, a sense of creativity and individuality in
each child.
Granted, a D should be legible enough to distinguish it from a P, but
the method through which that difference in expressed to a wide-eyed
5-year-old who defies the handwriting stereotype can have various
effects. Even though many of us high school students don’t have any
problems writing in cursive any longer, we are still in a constant
struggle to ensure that we are writing our own lives instead of people
writing them for us.
After months and years of standardized tests that seek to conform and
group students based on narrow guidelines, it may seem difficult to
transcend the imposing stereotypes that have been placed upon us by
teachers, colleges, schools, parents and even friends.
However, whether you get A’s or straight F’s, your grades have little
correlation to the intellectual and individual liberties that lie before
you. Waiting around for a report card to come in the mail is not the best
way to go about freeing who you are from the way people have decided to
“write” you.
You have to take action by defying your stereotypes through creative
expression and start controlling your own self image. Too often, people
desire a recognition of their individuality without defining who they are
in a meaningful way that can be personally inspired yet shared.
Even though writing is such an integral part of everyday life, certain
scholastic traditions have hammered home the association of writing with
various types of humiliation: from having to write “I will not pull
Jane’s hair” one hundred times on the blackboard to reading a note to the
class.
But writing has the potential to fulfill the positive aspects of self
expression as well. Finding outlets in which to define your individuality
of ideas, beliefs and creativity can be discovered in many different
enjoyable mediums.
To limit one’s expression to five paragraph essays, would be denying
the creative potential that lies in journals, poems, short stories,
memoirs and even epic tales. Though it has long been used by people to
articulate a particular image through the written word, it is far from
the only language by which you can express originality. The language of
music, art, dance, sports, drama, etc., all carry as much expressive
power as words.
But these opportunities are powerless unless you invest the time to
define yourself instead of sitting back and letting others define you. As
you get ready to move up a grade or out of school, always keep in mind
the importance of writing your own life, composing your own symphony and
painting your own masterpiece.
* KELLIE BROWNELL is a junior at Newport Harbor High School where she
is editor-in-chief of the Beacon. Her columns will appear occasionally in
the Community Forum section.
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