Could vintage typewriters be the future of writing for kids?

The Mommies Reviews

One teacher says yes.

Judging from the clacking keys, students in Fred Durbin’s Analog Writing class at Lincoln Park Performing Arts Charter School would agree. They’re bringing the past into the future this semester. Using vintage typewriters from Durbin’s own collection of nearly 100 classic machines, they’re learning not just how to operate typewriters (including the lost art of touch typing), but how to use them to create original work. 

Durbin, a renowned writer of speculative fiction (A Green and Ancient LightThe Star Shard), has developed a class that’s as much philosophical as practical. Using professor Richard Polt’s The Typewriter Revolution–the “bible” for typewriter enthusiasts–as a textbook, Durbin and his 20 students are embarking on a quest that rewards hands-on creation.

“The typewriter keyboard is unforgiving,” says Durbin.  “If you hit the wrong key at the wrong time, you have an error printed in crisp black and white on the page. You’re committed. There is no easy backspace and redo. You can correct the mistake using a Ko-Rec-Type strip, which we use in class, but it takes more deliberate work and slows you down. The typewriter teaches you to think more in your head, before you write, than with your fingers.”

Since Lincoln Park became a device-free school this semester, the course is perfectly timed, and no mere novelty. It’s teaching students the value of physical objects and skills, and offers a welcome alternative to today’s soulless, AI-dominated landscape.

“This course is designed to help students focus deeply on one thing at a time,” says Durbin, “to concentrate without distractions and to have meaningful interactions and conversations with others both in real time and in written conversations across time and space through the printed word.  It also helps students be tactile, sensory beings in a physical world while also practicing the good, clear, meaningful art of written communication.”

While Durbin says it is too early to have any data in his class, he explains that there is a high school teacher, Ryan Adney, in Phoenix, who uses typewriters regularly in his English classes. He notes measurable improvement in spelling when students use typewriters.  They can’t rely on spell-check, so they must look up words in dictionaries and have to pay attention to what words look like on the page.  “I think that’s a major key to good writing – learning to see what’s on the page because what we see there is often different than what we think is there,” adds Durbin.

Thank you,

Glenda, Charlie and David Cates

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