Our minivan winds through the rolling hills of York
County. As we pass a crossroads, Dixie says, "We're near the town of
York. That's the home of Dori Sanders, the novelist." Our conversation
turns to African-American novelists, then to poetry, then to the mission
that's taken us on the road again -- the teaching of writing.
We stop at a small bakery to buy oatmeal cookies for
students at Chester Middle School where we're headed.
I'm fortunate to be on yet another road trip with Dixie
Goswami, a teacher whose impact on education, from these Southern hills
all the way to Alaska, has been as dramatic, appealing and cross-cultural
as her name.
Though Dixie Goswami was hired at Clemson as an English
professor in 1984, she was no stranger to the University. A native South
Carolinian, she had earned her master's degree in English at Clemson in
1966. That experience, along with her meeting and marrying Clemson Alumni
Professor Bhuvenesh Goswami, is a story in itself.
But the story for Clemson, for the state, and for thousands
of school children across the country is Dixie's devotion to the teaching
of writing.
After her master's degree and nearly two decades of teaching
and research at Rutgers, Leeds University in England, University of Massachusetts,
the Bread Loaf School of English at Middlebury College in Vermont and other
schools -- Dixie returned to Clemson.
In 1989, she received the Class of '39 Award for Excellence
for outstanding teaching, research and community service. That award reflects
the direction of her energy at Clemson -- creating networks for writing
teachers and taking writing, integrated with technology, into the workplace,
field, street or wherever communication is needed.
These are a few highlights of the projects and networks
she has had a hand in starting:
- Networks for English teachers, linked with Clemson's
English department, have led to several programs beyond the state's borders.
In 1991, The Bingham Trust funded three such programs begun at Clemson that
eventually supported teachers in a dozen states to develop and share innovative
literature and writing projects for students.
- REACH -- Rural Education Alliance for Collaboration
in the Humanities -- is a network of S.C. teachers and educators at all
levels. The REACH project and the Clemson Forestry and Agricultural Network
were among the first organizations to support S.C. public school teachers
in networked, on-line activities.
- South Carolina Cross-Age Tutoring was a program
linking at-risk students as tutors to younger students. In 1994, its final
year, the project was active in 50 schools, most of them rural, and involved
thousands of young people.
Writing and Performing across Cultures, now known
as Writing and Performing across Communities, is a program in the performing
arts department to promote creative drama in S.C. schools. Last spring,
over 250 young people from around the state gathered at the Brooks Center
for performances of original student scripts adapted to the stage by Clemson
performing arts students.
The Bread Loaf Rural Teacher Network has a site
at Clemson's Strom Thurmond Institute, where Dixie is a senior scholar and
a member of the literacy and community service networks team. This national
network, coordinated by Dixie, funds fellowships for rural teachers to attend
the Bread Loaf School of English, a summer graduate program of Middlebury
College, where Dixie is a chaired member of the faculty. The program, supported
by the DeWitt Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund, has already provided over $280,000
in support of S.C. teachers and will continue funding professional development
for them through the year 2001.
She also coordinates Bread Loaf writing courses at three
campuses: Rowe, N.M.; Oxford, England; and Juneau, Alaska; and is a consultant
for several foundations and state departments of education.
On a dollar-and-cents basis, Dixie and her colleagues in
the Clemson English department have raised more than $5 million to support
English teachers and students in South Carolina and those associated with
the Bread Loaf School of English.
Fittingly, last April, Dixie received the Richard Riley
Award from the S.C. Council of Teachers of English for her commitment to
and support of students and teachers in South Carolina. It was only the
second time the honor had been bestowed.
In receiving it, Dixie immediately dedicated it to all
the Clemson faculty and staff in the English department, the college and
the Strom Thurmond Institute "who take seriously the goal of reaching
out to rural communities, providing support and encouragement for this kind
of service."
We arrive at Chester Middle School, park the minivan,
check in at the principal's office and proceed down the hall to Doris Ezell's
classroom. Her seventh-grade students are reading excerpts from an epic
poem, "The Ramayana."
Dixie begins talking to the students about what they're
reading. In between bites of cookie, the students pay close attention to
what she says.
They don't know where she's been or what she's accomplished,
but they sense her genuine care and regard for their ideas. And suddenly,
they become her students.
Chris Benson
has worked with Dixie Goswami for ten years as student, co-researcher,
and publications director for the Bread Loaf Rural Teacher Network.