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Sometime last year John Scalzi wrote a post at Whatever called
"10 Things Teenage Writers Should Know About Writing". I agreed with pretty much all of it (although Scalzi's default writing style is more...well, I don't think even he would disagree with the description "snarky"...than mine). In fact, I agreed with it so much that I passed it on to the young writers whom I instructed in
last year's Sage Hill Teen Writing Experience, and also to the
young writers I mentored earlier this year, and I have no doubt I'll use it again for the upcoming
Sage Hill Teen Writing Experience, which I am once again instructing.Now Scalzi
has a follow-up post ...
Posted by Edward Willett at 18:46, June 18th, 2007 under Blog |
While I am still some seven years away from having a teenager of my own, I well remember being a teenager, and being occasionally asked by an exasperated parent, "What were you thinking?"To which, as often as not, I replied, "I don't know." This was seldom seen as an acceptable answer.Had I but been one of today's fortunate teens, I could have bolstered my profession of ignorance with scientific evidence.Meg Gerrard, a professor of psychology at Iowa State University, recently analyzed 12 years of studies of adolescent risk-taking. Her conclusion: when kids tell their parents they don't know what they were thinking when they did something risky, they're telling the exact truth.Her ...
Posted by Edward Willett at 16:00, June 4th, 2007 under Blog, Science Columns |