Tim Heath stumbled into teachers' college in 1962 and became hooked
by the joy and challenge of teaching. He taught for the next 47
years in a variety of roles and places, including remote rural New
Zealand and a village on Samoa's second island, Savai'i. Some of
his teaching was in secondary schools, but he mainly worked in
primary schools, where he became fascinated with children's initial
experience of school and how they learn to read. For a time, he
became an educational gypsy, visiting Correspondence School
children. In his ten years as principal at Auckland's inner-city
Decile One Newton Central School, from 1988 to 1998, he endeavoured
to put into practice many of the ideas outlined in this book.
Tim writes poetry and, occasionally, gets it published. He was, for
many years, an MC at Poetry Live -- Auckland's long-running weekly
poetry event. He has won several poetry slams, including Poetry
Idol, Womad and Going West. He was part of 'The Best of the Best'
event at the 2017 Auckland Writers Festival. The Poetry Gold Cup,
from Burnie in north-west Tasmania, is a prized possession, as is
the People's Choice Award from Bellingen Literary Festival in rural
New South Wales. He was delighted to be voted People's Choice at
the 2019 Going West Festival.
A collection of Tim's poetry was published in 2018, under the title
Not As The Crow Flies. He writes about everyday life:
relationships, shopping, parking, love and loss. He believes that
poetry should not be difficult and that it's okay if a poem makes
people laugh.
Time for writing is happily compromised by being a grandfather,
reading, cooking, gardening, golfing, ocean sailing, watching
cricket, tending an ageing Grey Lynn villa . . . and dreaming.
Ask a Question About this Product More... |