Course
Components | Visiting
Writers | Scholarships
| Book
Awards | Kidd
Prizes | Application
| History
Join
like-minded peers in a learning community with the shared mission of
deepening your intellectual lives and developing yourselves as literary
artists over an entire year. Nowhere else on campus do undergraduate
students receive the sustained and close attention to their creative
writing that the Kidd Tutorial offers.
Students
are challenged to confront literature with a spirit of engagement, to
pose questions, and to seek connections among a wide variety of texts
in poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, craft, and criticism. The spirit
of inquiry and exposure to diverse ideas are integral to the tutorial
with the expectation that students will use what they learn as inspiration
for their own work. Students leave our yearlong course with the tools
of technique, critical reading, and compositional savvy to sustain their
writing efforts far into the future.
Each Kidd
Tutorial section matches one graduate tutor—a poet or fiction
writer—with at least four and no more than seven undergraduates
who have identified a primary focus of poetry or fiction. In the belief
that writers must explore and experiment in order to learn their craft
and become better writers, all students study and write poetry, fiction,
and creative nonfiction. Occasionally two sections meet for a group
class or workshop (for instance, a fiction and poetry section). At least
twice during the year, students meet as one class to discuss a topic
of common interest. And all sections convene for the Kidd
Talks throughout the year.
The Kidd
Tutorials’ twelve credit hours (4 credits per term) count toward
a student’s degree as elective credits; if you are interested
in the Kidd Tutorial, make sure you don’t use up all your electives
prior to applying to The Kidd. For English majors, the first two Kidd
courses (CRWR 417, 418) will fulfill English major upper-division elective
credits; the third term (CRWR 419) may be accepted to fulfill one of
the other requirements (perhaps “1789 to the present,” or
a gender or race/ethnicity category). English majors should check with
Professor William Rossi, Director of Undergraduate Studies, about this
possibility.
During
the 2008-2009 school year, Kidd Tutorial sections will meet on Mondays
and Wednesdays from 2:00-3:50pm (all three terms). Students must maintain
a grade of C or higher in their Kidd Tutorial section in order to register
for subsequent terms.
Course
Components
- Workshops:
In the conviction that communal intellectual inquiry leads to individual
literary inspiration, students are encouraged and challenged in their
writing all year long. The Kidd Tutorial is not solely a workshop
course, although workshops are a component throughout the year. Students
generate work in all three genres—doing
assigned exercises and their own writing—and, of course, respond
to their peers’ writing. And students write work that is literary
in intent: in other words the emphasis is on language and characterization
rather than plot-driven work.
- Reading:
Reading critically as a writer is an essential life-long skill for
all writers. Just as a musician studies other musicians and visual
artists study other visual artists, writers need to examine closely
how authors have put together a story or poem or essay, what craft
choices they have made and why and to what effect. Students in the
Kidd Tutorial Program read widely and deeply throughout the year from
the Kidd Core Texts
(as well as additional texts their graduate tutor may assign), and
they respond, both through reading logs and class discussion, with
a rigorous and analytical mind.
- Inquiry
and Research: The process of inquiry—a close examination
of a matter in a search for information and truth—is a cornerstone
of the Kidd Tutorial. Asking questions, analyzing, probing, digging
deeper into texts—both published and self-generated—is
how writers identify and clarify issues (both thematic and craft-driven)
at stake in their own work; this is what Kidd Tutorial students do
throughout the year. Students submit a formal proposal that describes
their concerns and creative preoccupations and the readings they will
study to extend and investigate those concerns. Lines of inquiry are
shaped by the belief that the best writing always raises more questions
than it answers.
Students
work both as a group and independently on developing and understanding
the underlying motivations of their writing. They keep research logs
and work closely with their Kidd Tutor. Finally, students submit a
formal paper and lead a class discussion that outlines their discoveries
(and new questions) and summarizes their ambitions for their final
creative project.
- Final
Creative Project: Completion of the Kidd Tutorial culminates
in a significant body of work, the equivalent of an undergraduate
thesis, consisting of 15-20 poems, 3-4 short stories or essays in
creative nonfiction, or a novella. Many Kidd Tutorial students go
on to take Advanced Workshops in their genre with University of Oregon
Creative Writing faculty, in preparation for applying for graduate
study.
Visiting
Writers
Each
year, at least six poets, fiction writers, and writers of literary nonfiction
visit the University of Oregon Creative Writing Program to give readings,
workshops, and lectures. At least two visiting writers meet, often more,
with the assembled Kidd Tutorial sections to speak about literary craft
and to take questions from students and tutors. These informative and
informal lectures are open to the public. Recent Visiting Writers have
included Frederick Busch, Marjorie Sandor, Major Jackson, Tobias Wolff,
Gerald Stern, Tess Gallagher, Bret Lott, Antonya Nelson, Susan Straight,
Mark Doty, and N. Scott Momaday.
In addition,
faculty from across campus are invited to present Kidd Talks throughout
the year.
Scholarships
Six $3,000
scholarships will be awarded for 2008-2009. The funds will be paid out
$1,000 per term. If a student who is awarded a scholarship leaves the
Kidd Program for any reason during the year, distribution of the funds
will be terminated.
Every student
with a 3.5 GPA or higher who applies to the Kidd Program is eligible
for a scholarship. Scholarships will be awarded based on the quality
and potential of the literary work the student submits with his or her
application.
Scholarship
recipients will be notified by email and letter sometime in early May.
Personal
Library Book Awards
Every student
who is accepted into the Kidd program will be awarded a book written
by each of our six Visiting Writers during the term the writer does
his or her reading. Students are encouraged to get their books autographed
by the Visiting Writers.
Kidd
Prizes
The
Kidd
Memorial Writing Competition, held each spring, awards up
to $800 in total prizes to poets and fiction writers enrolled as undergraduates
at the University of Oregon. The Creative Writing Program invites a
nationally known poet and fiction writer to judge student manuscripts;
one of these writers then presents the Kidd Prizes to the winners. Past
judges have included Frederick Busch, B. H. Fairchild, Mark Doty, Rosellen
Brown, Mary Gaitskill, Yusef Komunyakaa, Sharon Olds, Gerald Stern,
Susan Straight, Edward Hirsch, Charles Baxter, Eavan
Boland, and
Tobias Wolfe.
Judges
for 2008 are Antonya Nelson and N. Scott Momaday.
Applying
to the Kidd
The
best potential candidates for the Kidd Tutorials are those who are motivated
to develop their writing and their literary craft through serious intellectual
engagement—and who, as a rule, are already experienced in university-level
writing workshops. Students should have completed two or more courses
at the Introductory (200) and Intermediate (300) levels in Creative
Writing.
If you
have a question about the Kidd Tutorials, you’re welcome to contact
the Director of the Kidd Tutorials, Professor Laurie Lynn Drummond (lauried@uoregon.edu,
346-0510, 47A Columbia) or Kidd Fellow Christopher Roethle (croethle@uoregon.edu,
346-0541, 47B Columbia) at any time during the year. Their hours are
posted each term in the Creative Writing Program office, 144 Columbia.
Applications to the Kidd Tutorials are accepted in the Creative Writing
Program office, 144 Columbia, through the second Friday in April. However,
interested students are encouraged to inquire throughout the year. Applications
include a personal statement (see detailed instructions on application),
a letter of recommendation from a teacher, unofficial transcripts, and
a writing sample. Complete and print your application
directly from the web.
History
of the Kidd Tutorial
In
1991, with an endowment of over one million dollars from Walter and
Nancy Kidd, Garrett Hongo (then Director of the Creative Writing Program)
proposed creation of the Kidd Tutorials. The proposal modeled the
program on the Watts Writers' Workshop in Los Angeles, the Watson
Foundation of Rhode Island, the Hopwood Lecture and Contests at the
University of Michigan, and the Harvard Tutorials. A pilot program
was begun that same year.
The
Watts Writers' Workshop was created through federal funding and by
community leaders in Watts following the riots of 1965. Community
leaders proposed the workshops as a way for the community to rebuild
itself, and as an avenue to enhance and promote cultural life, raise
morale, and provide education. The Workshop did a great deal for an
emerging black literary consciousness and community and helped build
the beginning of a tradition for young black artists. This kind of
community as well as the focus and intensive scholarship that characterizes
the Harvard Tutorials continues to inspire the Kidd Tutorials here
at the University of Oregon.