"Kids Don't Come with Instruction Manuals": A Mother Writing to Learn Across Her Lifespan

Authors

  • Anna D'Orazio University of Cincinnati

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21623/1.12.1.2

Keywords:

Writing to Learn, Lifespan Development of Writing, Motherhood, Journaling, Self-Sponsored Writing, Everyday Writer

Abstract

In this article, I focus on an everyday writer, my mother, engaging in self-sponsored writing to learn (WTL) activities across her lifespan. Focusing specifically on her personal journals and her accounts of her longitudinal WTL trajectory, I trace the learning pathways she took to develop her identity as a mother across her life. Writing was a benefit to her everyday life given, as she puts it, there is no set “instruction manual” for how to parent. Additionally, I trace the “multidirectional” nature of her literacy by investigating how literacy learning circulates given Jane’s intent to pass her WTL journals down to her children as a text to learn from when they become parents (Lee). In making my argument, I extend conversations happening in our field about writing and learning as a lifewide activity. I emphasize the importance writing has on identity development and learning across one’s life and, as such, this article helps literacy studies, lifespan development of writing studies, and motherhood rhetorical studies gauge the vast ways writers write to learn outside of formal schooling. 

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Published

2025-05-29

How to Cite

D'Orazio, A. (2025). "Kids Don’t Come with Instruction Manuals": A Mother Writing to Learn Across Her Lifespan. Literacy in Composition Studies, 12(1), 1–23. https://doi.org/10.21623/1.12.1.2

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