Pupils Share Dyslexic's
Victory
Roger Essley, dyslexic writer
and artist, now has his work in the Metropolitan Museum in New York City, but
he was 40 years old before he submitted his first children's book. Amended
from a report by Alan Crowell MAINE TODAY/KENNEBEC JOURNAL
Roger Essley's
artwork is in the Metropolitan Museum in New York City, but he was 40 years old
before he submitted his first children's book. The reply he received back from
the publisher for that first effort was not encouraging. "We
don't like your story, because we don't think it is very well written, but we
like your pictures," was the message, said Essley. Equal
parts education and inspiration, Essley's presentation at Margaret Chase Smith
School Thursday was both about his own experiences overcoming dyslexia and how
to use pictures to find and exploit the most interesting part of a story — its
"hook". Diagnosed
with dyslexia when he was in third grade, Essley gravitated to drawing when he
was in elementary school, because it was the one skill people complimented him
on. When he was
writing his first children's book much later in life at 40, Essley said he realized
the importance of connecting pictures and writing. For many people, pictures are
the entrance to writing, but it is seldom taught that way in school, he said.
As artist in residence
at the Margaret Chase Smith School, Essley taught the Tellingboard process, a
method of telling stories with a series of 13 pictures. By telling a story first
through crude drawings, students — particularly those with problems writing or
reading — can focus on the storytelling process without getting bogged down in
the mechanics of writing. "Storyboarding
helps you get out of your head onto paper what you are thinking about something,"
said Essley. He told fifth-graders at Margaret Chase Smith School that he had
to rewrite his first book about 40 times before it was accepted, four years after
he had first submitted it. He
gained entrance into the world of publishing through his skills as an artist,
he said. "They found out about me because of the pictures, and then I learned
to write," said Essley. "Why
did it take till I was 45? Because I was afraid." What
many students took away from the presentation was the courage to believe they,
too, could write. Megan
Davis, 11, of Skowhegan, said after listening to Essley that she thought it was
possible to become a writer. Dillon
Perkins, 11, also identified with his story: "Now I want to be a writer more.
Because he said he wasn't a very good writer when he was little, and I am not
a good writer right now, but I like writing." Amanda
Darge, 11, of Skowhegan, said Essley "inspired her." "He made me think of how
no one thought he could do anything, but then he showed them that he could," she
said. Asked what she learned she said, "If somebody says something about you,
you don't have to believe it." With many
thanks to the informative Maine Today/Kennebec Journal (October 19th 2001).
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