Teens Get Creative for Poetry Slam “Lite”
October 2nd, 2007 by AdminThe Christian Science Monitor
Tuesday, February 9, 1999
By Reese Erlich
Special to the Christian Science Monitor
SAN FRANCISCO — Natriece Spicer steps onto the stage wearing a white leather jacket and sporting rings on eight fingers. The African-American teen begins reading from her poem “Rivers Crossed,” in a clear, forceful voice: “Sitting, lying, now I think of the pages/as they have been yet to be written?” Her poem is one of several offered by young people at this demonstration poetry slam — the first in the newly formed national Youth Poetry Slam League, launched here in January.
Some 150 young people on 25 teams will perform in monthly poetry competitions in their home titles, complete with Olympic-style judging and national playoffs. Adult poetry slams, which began 10 years ago in
The youth league, on the other hand, “is poetry-slam lite,” says Marvin White. a poet and teacher. “This is not the beer-bottle throwing slams with people getting up on stage and doing angst-ridden routines in 15 minutes.” .
The league will encourage young people to meet other poets and improve their work. “It’s less competition, and more an opportunity to share with other kids.” Mr. White says. Students will compete with poems they’ve written ahead of time.
Improved Academics
Janet Heller, coordinator for WritersCorps in
“Accessibility to stage and print really helps kids learn, be more self-confident, be more self-directed,” she says. In many cases, she says, students go on to finish high school and enter college.
The
He has trouble getting the girls in the all-female, after-school program he works with to transfer their colorful, African-American oral tradition into writing. “The girls tell wonderful stories among themselves,” he says, “but when they have to write it down or say it front of class, fear sets in.”
White encourages students to write about their own experiences and discover their own voice. “I try not to scare them with the ‘p’word -poetry,” he says.
Natriece became interested in writing even before joining White’s class. She carries a journal/poetry book with her everywhere and writes her poems at home or even while riding the bus. Like many Sunnydale children, she is being raised by a single mother. She has friends who have died violent deaths and has a family member with AIDS. Many of her poems express the anguish and hope felt by her and fellow Sunnydale residents.
She says she excels in English classes. But the WritersCorps program also gives her confidence to tackle math and science. “Through writing, I was able to focus and get up the nerve to say I can do this and get a good grade,” she says. She and five other young women from Sunnydale formed one of the Youth Poetry Slam League teams. At each competition judges will hold up cards, rating the poems on a scale of 1 to 10. Winners will get an all-expense paid trip to
Professionals Weigh In
Genny Lim, a prominent
“It’s like sports.” she says. Poetry slams can “be a way of developing a community [and] acknowledging each other’s gifts.”
Both teams intermixed professional poets with teens. That was fortunate for the professionals, according to Lim. She says the young poets have a passion and commitment unmatched by the professionals.
If a poetry slam pitted a pro team against the teens, she says, “youth would win hands down.”

