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Introductory notes by Carol L Steen, Program Co-Chair and Past
President Rotary eClub One; Retired Elementary School Teacher
If you are a Rotarian involved in a literacy program, I salute you!
The following article presents ideas for working with all children,
but I see it as especially important for those adults working with
at-risk youth. Studies of resilient children and young adults have
outlined many common factors of these “survivors.” Two of them are:
Having a mentor or mentors
– A mentor may be someone who is in the youth’s life for a short
time or an extended
time; the important factor is that there is always someone the youth
may count on, such as a tutor, coach, teacher, or community worker.
Rotarians are in strong positions to provide such mentoring.
Being able to imagine one’s self out of the current situation
– This is where ideas in this article come into play. “Future
Stories” are guided by an adult storyteller. The adult sets time,
place, situation, and adds characters. With younger children, these
stories remain oral and are interactive between the guide and the
child or group of children. But those working with older children
and young adults might use the idea of Future Stories for writing
assignments, dramatic improvisation, or video production.
The Joy of Being Heard by Youth Using Future Stories Excerpted from material by
Peter Eldridge
What if I’m not good at telling stories?
As your children's interest grows,
consider stories that are "serial" in nature. Our kids once built a
Christian radio station in our town (in a story) because there
wasn't one. The oldest was the CEO. The next, the fund-raiser and
entertainer. The third born laid the block and built the building.
Each has unique gifting and each was given a role that fit.
Rotarian Peter Eldridge is a friend of a Rotary eClub One member.
Peter lives in Dillon, Montana. |
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