The Nation Celebrates Writing
WASHINGTON, Oct. 20, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- The written word is getting lots of love as people put pen to paper and fingers to keyboards for the National Day on Writing®. Now in its ninth year, this annual celebration is lifted up through tens of thousands of social posts to the #WhyIWrite hashtag.
The National Council of Teachers of English began this annual event in 2009 to highlight the importance of writing. Whether we are sending text messages, posting status updates, crafting emails, or jotting down lists, writing has never been more central to our everyday lives.
"Powerful, yet not wholly understood, writing surrounds us and our students," says NCTE President Jocelyn A. Chadwick. "Empowering them to see, comprehend, examine, and master the audience, purpose, and occasion of writing throughout life's every facet—to use words well—defines our amazing, dauntingly humble, powerful task as educators."
Highlights include:
- A rich website filled with writing resources, podcasts from renowned writers, and events across the country.
- A wildly popular tweet-up to the hashtag.
- Support from the US Congress with a bipartisan resolution sponsored by Senator Roberts (R-KS) and Senator Casey (D-PA) recognizing the National Day on Writing.
- Partnerships in the publishing community that produced video stories from such authors as Jamie Ford, Hart Hanson, Meg Gardiner, Jack Challoner, E. Lockhart and David Barclay Moore.
"It's been incredibly inspiring to convene the Congressional, publishing and education communities to celebrate writing in such a powerful way," says NCTE Executive Director Emily Kirkpatrick. "This event provides the nation with an opportunity to acknowledge the importance of something teachers dedicate their lives to cultivating every single day."
Join the conversation and post your thoughts to #WhyIWrite today!
The National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) is the nation's most comprehensive literacy organization, supporting more than 25,000 teachers across the preK–college spectrum. Through the expertise of its members, NCTE has served at the forefront of every major improvement in the teaching and learning of English and the language arts since 1911.
Press Contact: Jenna Fournel, Communications Director
[email protected] \ 703.599.5749
SOURCE National Council of Teachers of English
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