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Literacy Council presents poet Maria Luisa Arroyo in fourth workshop

The Pioneer Valley Reading Council will present its fourth "Literacy and Community" workshop for the 2007-08 academic year on Feb. 14 at the Chicopee Elks Lodge #1849 at 431 Granby Rd., Chicopee. Workshop registration begins at 3:45 p.m. and is followed by the workshop at 4:15 p.m. Maria Luisa Arroyo will read her poetry and discuss writing poetry with children.

Arroyo will provide an interactive experience for workshop attendees. This will be accomplished by using and creating traditional and Puerto Rican poetry. Many classroom tips will be given.

Arroyo was born in Manati, Puerto Rico, and raised in the North End of Springfield, Mass. She is a poet, translator and educator. Educated at Colby, Tufts, and Harvard, Arroyo has taught college students German, Spanish, Creative Writing and English Composition. A 2004 Massachusetts Cultural Council artist grant winner in poetry, she facilitates Spanish-language and English-language workshops with poets of all ages and at all stages and performs her poetry at local and regional venues. Many of her poems, have been published in literary journals such as The Bilingual Review, CALYX, the Women's Review of Books, and Palabra: A Magazine of Chicano and Literary Art.

The following is Arroyo's poetic statement:

"Writing poetry is not isolated from the acts of reading, teaching, and performing it. Whenever I teach workshops whether to fifth graders or to community college students who ages range from 18 to 75, participants immediately understand this as we work together to build a temporary community of poets from a random group of strangers.

"Regardless of the age or stage, as established poets or poets-in-progress, we must open ourselves up to listen with intent to each other's works; to respond truthfully and respectfully; to learn how to discern between true sentiment and sentimentality in our own work and in the works of others; and to never apologize for the sound of one's own voice nor for the subject matter that one chooses.

"To become a poet means to learn how to claim one's authentic voice; to access and navigate through one's poetic landscape be it through memory, experience, moments of weakness, one's pure imagination or a combination of them all; to develop one's craft by reading widely and writing regularly; and to be open to the idea that sources of inspiration for poems exist everywhere."

Pioneer Valley Reading Council is an approved provider for PDP's, and the series of five workshops meet the DOE requirements.

For further information, call Meredith Cox at 323-5524 or email her at belchertown@juno.com. In case of a weather emergency, PVRC will cancel and reschedule this presentation if the Chicopee schools cancel daytime, afternoon or evening activities.