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About Peggy

P Simmons

Leading writing groups using the Amherst Writers and Artists (AWA) method brings together Peggy's passions: creative writing and fostering communities in which the traditionally voiceless play a vital role and where each person can fulfill their potential. 

Peggy's experience in brief:


Peggy began facilitating creative workshops in 1992 when she became a full-time volunteer with the International Fourth World Movement.  During her seven years with the organization her work included storywriting with children in Street Libraries in East New York, running a project for children in poor neighborhoods throughout western Europe to communicate with each other electronically, and developing a pilot project to use the internet to link young people from very different backgrounds throughout Europe in the fight against extreme poverty.  Her last position in the organization was Co-director of the Paris Area Regional Club of Knowledge and Solidarity, a project that brought together youth from very different Paris neighborhoods in anti-poverty projects. 

Since leaving the International Fourth World Movement's volunteer corps in 2000, she has taught English as a Foreign Language and managed retail establishments with low-income and low-literacy associates with Juma Ventures and at the bookstore at Laney College, a community college in Oakland, California.   She has also been trained by and volunteered with Streetside Stories, 826 Valencia and Project Read.  

Since 2004, Peggy has taken AWA workshops to develop her own writing.  She has been published under a pseudonym in, as examples, the Sound and Literary Art Book and flashquake where she was nominated for a Pushcart Prize.  She finished her first novel in the summer of 2008 and is currently looking for the best agent to respresent it.  

In the spring of 2005, she co-founded BREW, a writing workshop that uses the Amherst Writers and Artists method and has been meeting weekly ever since. BREW has published a collection of its writing and is in the final stages of publishing its second collection while choosing pieces for its third.  

In 2007, Peggy was certified as an AWA Writing Group Leader and began to bring together the different skills and passions she'd been pursuing for fifteen years:  developing the potential of low-literacy youth and adults, creative writing, and the proven techniques of the AWA method.

In February 2008, Peggy's youth writing workshop project was accepted into Intersection for the Arts' incubator program. She named the project Green Windows and now runs youth and diversity workshops in Alameda County as well as workshops for the general public. More information about Green Windows can be found at http://greenwindowswriters.org.