Fade to Black

If you take someone’s written words and edit them, do they become yours? This is the question the 7th graders of Clinton asked themselves as we explored Blackout Poetry, created when a poet takes a marker (usually a black marker) to an already established text, like a newspaper article or essay, and starts redacting words until a poem or image is formed. After reading “We’re not good enough to not practice” by Kiese Laymon, students picked up a marker and created Blackout poems, part poem and part visual art, inspired by this text.

Ms. Logothetis (Morning Class)

We're not good enough to not practice Jasmin O.

We're not good enough to not practice Jocelyn J.

We're not good enough to not practice Ismail A.

Untitled Faiz S.

Ms. Macmillan

3000 Glow Liam G.

We're not good enough to not practice Syafiqah N.

We're not good enough to not practice William N.

We're not good enough to not practice José C.

Untitled Tugba A.

We're not good enough to not practice AB G.

We're good enough Yoselyn E.

Ms. Logothetis (Afternoon Class)

We're not good enough to not practice Byron M.

We're not good enough to not practice Ebela

We're not good enough to not practice Maria

We're not good enough to not practice Alberto F.

We're not good enough to not practice Zarina B.

We're not good enough to not practice Itali H.

We're not good enough to not practice Estrella G.

Ms. Krasic

We're not good enough to not practice Azrina A.

Untitled Autumn D.

Random Person Ubaidah A.

Commit Jalani D.

Practice Samaviya S.

Love lasts forever Ira / Nur H.

Potato Sukayna A.

Period Umar P.