All posts by: Megan Scribner

Poetry and the Genuine: Now I Become Myself What might happen if we “quiet our need to steer the plot”?   Or think about the cost of not saying “I am who I am”?   Do you, too, find thoughts such as...
Continue Reading →
We are delighted to announce the publication of Josh Morton’s new book: Voices Within A Teenage Mind. (You may remember Josh from his Teacher’s Talk interview with us back in December.) At the end of each semester, Josh asks his...
Continue Reading →
“Notes from the Playground” is a regular feature on our blog. For this series, Greg John generously allows us to share his principal’s reflections and stories from his wonderful book, Notes from the Playground. In these stories, Greg enables us...
Continue Reading →
Since the moment my friendship with Lucille began in 1989, I feel as if almost everything I’ve learned about life and love and being human (in this both wondrous and often terrifying world), I learned from her, my friend and...
Continue Reading →
Back in April for Poetry Month, Bill Murray was asked to share his favorite poems for Oprah Winfrey’s O Magazine.   Murray chose Lucille Clifton’s “What the Mirror Said” as one of his four favorite poems for the article. On his...
Continue Reading →
Lucille Clifton believed in the liberating possibilities of learning – and she treasured the schools and teachers who invited and nurtured it. Her personal commitment to her students was unwavering and they in turn were deeply grateful for her incisive mind, her...
Continue Reading →
            the river between us in the river that your father fished my father was baptized.    it was their hunger that defined them, one, a man who knew he could feed himself if it all...
Continue Reading →
For our second post in the “Week of Lucille Clifton” — here is Kathleen Glaser’s reflections on Lucille Clifton’s “blessing the boats” from Teaching with Heart.         blessing the boats (at St. Mary’s) may the tide that...
Continue Reading →
Today is the anniversary of Lucille Clifton’s birthday.  She was a remarkable woman and poet. Though she is no longer with us, her poetry still speaks to us. Throughout the “Week of Lucille Clifton” — we will post her poems...
Continue Reading →