History
A brief history of the Kennesaw Mountain Writing Project
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The Kennesaw Mountain Writing Project (KMWP) was established in 1994 on the campus of Kennesaw State University. Funded by the National Writing Project (NWP), the KMWP was born of the cooperative efforts of the Kennesaw State English Department and Cobb County, Georgia, Public Schools in order to serve metro Atlanta and the suburban and rural counties that form northwest Georgia.
Originally directed by Sarah Robbins, the KMWP began its work by addressing our two goals consistent with the NWP model of teachers teaching teachers:
- to prepare educators, K-through-university, to apply what they learned during an intense Summer Invitational Institute by becoming more effective teachers of writing in their own classrooms and
- to prepare teacher leaders who could serve as mentors or teacher consultants-teaching colleagues the best practices for literacy instruction.
This "founding" group of the KMWP's new writing project site also devoted considerable energy to planning for the future of National Writing Project work in Kennesaw State's service area. They imagined and laid the foundation for many of the programs sponsored by the KMWP in the years that followed.
When the Institute ended, the fellows' association with the KMWP did not. The KMWP introduced a permanent Affiliate Continuity Program that would bring the fellows and their successors — now considered Teacher Consultants — together in subsequent months and years to participate in additional professional development activities building on the institute framework.
In the years since 2004, KMWP TCs have also led numerous staff development projects, including workshops and seminars in local schools during the academic year; open institutes for teachers during the summer; and specialized, advanced programs for educators already affiliated with the site.
Every summer institute since 1994, the KMWP has continued to refine its summer institute curriculum, consistent with the NWP model. One element of this work has involved having past institute fellows return to work as mentors for newcomers, as creative writers-in-residence, and as facilitators of reading and writing groups at the institute. At invitational summer institutes now, the primary members of the instructional team are past fellows, with the staff changing each year to combine a mix of experienced facilitators and teacher consultants returning to institute leadership for the first time.
Building on that foundation, the KMWP has added to its repertoire of programs each year, making our project a continuous enterprise. For example ...
- In 1995, we convened history and English educators to study nineteenth-century American women writers. This program, called "Domesticating the Secondary Canon," was funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
- By 1996, we were involved in forty separate inservice programs, and we joined Project Outreach, an initiative of the NWP, to serve high-risk learners and to improve professional development for teachers working in low-income communities. We launched a summer honors program for high school students with the theme "Writing New Horizons." We networked with fellows nationwide to create new teacher development models and a procedure for self-studies at NWP.
- In 1997, we offered a second summer honors program with the theme "What it Means to be an American." For the first time, alumni of our summer institute program helped to select readings and activities for the next summer institute, especially to serve teachers working with low-income students.
- Throughout 1998 and 1999, with NWP sites from California and Michigan, the KMWP worked on the two-and-a-half year NEH-funded project, "Making American Literatures," to study changes in the teaching of American Literature over the previous half-century. Like Project Outreach, our work on this program enhanced our staff development offerings in following years.
- Beginning in 2000, the KMWP organized the Keeping and Creating American Communities project, a major curriculum project funded primarily by the NEH to support writing-intensive, interdisciplinary study of community life.
- The KMWP has participated in a number of NWP-funded specialty initiatives, including programs focused on teaching with technology, on social action in the classroom, on teachers' inquiry groups, and on instruction of ESL/ELL students.
Three books sharing our learning from the KCAC project are Writing America: Classroom Literacy and Public Engagement, co-edited by Mimi Dyer and Sarah Robbins; Writing Our Communities: Local Learning and Public Culture, co-edited by Dave Winter and Sarah Robbins; and Teachers’ Writing Groups, co-edited by George Seaman, Kathleen Blake Yancey, Dede Yow, and Sarah Robbins.
Guiding the KMWP's continuing growth is the site's Advisory Council, an elected group of teacher leaders who meet several times each year to monitor and support program development. Led by a chair chosen from KMWP affiliates, the Advisory Council encourages all affiliated teachers to join with Council members in several active committees.
In the winter of 2007, Sarah Robbins assumed new duties at Kennesaw State University. We welcome Dr. Dawn Latta Kirby as the new Director of KMWP. Dr. Kirby is an established and well-respected member of the KSU faculty as a Professor of English and English Education. She is also the Program Coordinator of the English Education Ed.D. program at KSU. KMWP looks forward to the contributions that Dr. Kirby will make with us in the future.