Quiet writing: Retreat as pedagogy

  • M. Keane University of the Western Cape

Abstract

In a climate of increased pressure on academics to publish, some writing retreats have become crash-courses on writing, or bootcamps for getting words on paper.  I argue for a pedagogy that deliberately aims to restore a sense of well-being in writers and draws on creative writing (Haarhoff 1998), situated within a paradigm of mindful inquiry (Bentz and Shapiro 1998). Based on observations, reflections and evaluations of 18 retreats run over the past six years for staff at a university in Johannesburg, I argue that the structure and process of the retreat is an integral part of the writing pedagogy. A retreat traditionally includes mindfulness, with a balance between effort and reflection. The writing retreat pedagogy I propose is a flow between being productive and restoring a sense of life-balance: quiet writing – meaning coming from a place of inner calm. 

Author Biography

M. Keane, University of the Western Cape
Moyra Keane is an Educational Developer in the Centre for Learning Teaching and Development at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. She coordinates and teaches on postgraduate courses, presents workshops and courses for academic staff. These include Research Writing; Postgraduate Supervision, and Teaching in Higher Education. She coordinates the PGDipE(HE), runs a mentoring programme for staff, and supervises post-graduate students. She is a qualified coach. Her research interests are in indigenous knowledge, participative research, and the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning.

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Published
2017-04-23
How to Cite
Keane, M. 2017. “Quiet Writing: Retreat As Pedagogy”. South African Journal of Higher Education 31 (2), 138-53. https://doi.org/10.20853/31-2-1339.
Section
Special Section