Back in January of 2023, we began the tradition of us teachers gathering ’round the virtual campfire to discuss and encourage and inspire. It began like this:
We want our students to read and write well. We want them to think creatively and to value their ideas.
Learning, no matter the subject, can be an awesome journey. The path can be filled with wondrous sights to delight the intellect and warm the heart .
But the opposite can also be true.
The opposite of an awesome journey would be an arduous one. The opposite of a path with wondrous sights to delight the intellect and warm the heart is one filled with brambles and thorns that discourage and weaken. On this journey, this path, learning is thwarted, the heart is discouraged, and some form of illiteracy is a common outcome.
Here, as we begin our 3rd annual Blackbird & Company Virtual Campfire gathering at the dawn of 2025, the snapshot is not any easier to face:
“In the United States, 54% of adults read below the 6th grade level.”
How can we possibly make a difference?
We are so proud of our Blackbird & Company community!
You ARE making a difference!
YOU are the superhero!
You are inspiring your students to unplug and to pick up a book.
You are asking your students:
What’s your BIG idea?
And then, handing them a pencil and their student journal!
Here, at the dawn of 2025, we’re here to support you to start the year off on the right foot, inspiring your students to read for purpose and write their IDEAS well!
As a native Angeleno, born and raised in Los Angeles, California, with rampant fires raging so close to home, I hesitated launching into our virtual campfire tradition. My great-grandparent’s home—one of the homes in which I whiled away many years of childhood—though no longer part of our family, was lost. And the loss tugs at my heart.
In this home, my imagination thrived. Great-grandma Garnet Jewel had an old desk that belonged to her father, Great-great-grandpa Carlisle, who, lore has it, was an avid letter writer. This desk, chock-full of luxurious vintage stationary, fountain pens, and cancelled stamps, became a happy place for me since GG Garnet gave me free range of its contents. Behind me, built-in bookshelves were practically splitting with the weight of classics, including a complete red-linen collection of Dickens.
I’m so thankful for the freedom I was given to bring shape to my little girl ideas. I’m certain that this rich environment of great books and old-school technology—pencils and pens and all sorts of paper—inspired me to engage happily in the art of writing. I’m thankful for that childhood home that contained great-great-grandpa’s books and desk and utensils to write. And I’m thankful too for Charles Dickens who continues to remind writers of all ages that nothing is impossible when it comes to creating an idea:
“Consider nothing impossible, then treat possibilities as possibilities.” ~David Copperfield
Here, at the dawn of 2020, pondering the school year ahead here around the virtual campfire, we applaud you superheroes who are inspiring your students to read well, write well and think well using our curriculum.
~Kimberly