Description
Curriculum Summary:
In this poetry summer program, participants of all skill levels will walk away with 9+ draft poems across genres (e.g. nature, ekphrastic, found/erasure, and more), as well as one finalized poem in the genre of participants’ choosing. Poetry camp writers will receive and provide peer review from/for fellow campers and will benefit from individualized feedback from their instructors.
Poetry Camp / Virtual Writing Summer Camp for Teens (ages 13-19)
Schedule: July 20 – 24, 2026, 1:30 – 3:00 p.m. ET
During poetry camp, you’ll engage in interactive writing activities, connect with peers around the world, and work together to grow your poetry skills.
Between poetry camp sessions, you may be asked to work independently (and asynchronously) on writing prompts and activities, guided by peer and expert reviews, at your own pace, for approximately 1-2 hours, depending on your facilitator’s workshop plan. You will also receive individualized feedback that will strengthen your poetry.
*Please note that we require all participants to appear on either video or audio during online group meetings (video is preferred, but not required for poetry camp).
A Zoom link to join us for our live, virtual online poetry writing camp will be provided via email prior to the start date. Stay tuned!
What Teens Say About Our Writing Camps:
Guest Speaker:
Amanda Shea
Amanda Shea is a three-time Boston Music Award-winning Spoken Word Artist. Shea is an artist, performer, educator, artivist, filmmaker, producer, host, and curator. She founded Free Verse, an open mic series and cultural platform committed to amplifying radical imagination through art, truth-telling, and collective liberation. Her work can be found in the Museum of Fine Arts, The Boston Globe, TEDX, TEDXRoxbury, Netflix, Prime Video, BBC News, GBH, and much more. Shea is the curator and host of GBH OUTSPOKEN SATURDAYS. Shea is the recipient of The Boston Foundation LAB Grant 2024. She is the Arts & Culture Director at 617PEAK and an educator at various Boston Public Schools. Shea will be releasing her first book, “Pieces of Shea,” in 2026. Amanda's work examines her personal life experiences, social justice issues, and healing through trauma, utilizing art as a tool.
Workshop Facilitators:
Eleonora Grenfell
Eleonora graduated from Williams College with a BA degree in English and History. As an undergraduate, she worked as a peer writing tutor, helping students brainstorm, draft, and revise their writing assignments in a variety of academic fields. As a research assistant and thesis writer, Eleonora wrote extensively in the area of history, which sparked her interest in the role of personal narrative and social justice in nonfiction writing. In her previous experience as a volunteer college essay tutor, she uncovered her passion for helping young writers find creative ways to share their unique stories in their own voice. Eleonora currently works as a special education teacher at an elementary school near Boston, and she looks forward to teaching and inspiring young writers this summer.
Jasmine Konsoula
Jasmine Sofie Konsoula is a facilitator and former intern at Write the World, as well as a college student studying English Philology and Literature at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. As a Community Ambassador for Write the World in 2023, she worked closely with a global network of young writers, offering feedback and reviews, engaging with the community, and experimenting with different creative mediums. Through this role, she further developed her skills in editing, mentoring, and creative collaboration—strengths that continue to shape her approach to writing and teaching.
Her interest in storytelling as a tool for advocacy emerged powerfully during the ImagineEU Competition in 2024, where she led the Change for Her Chains campaign. As part of the project, she wrote, edited, directed, and presented a compelling video script focused on the ongoing fight for gender equality, earning recognition for its emotional clarity and powerful narrative voice.
In 2023, one of Jasmine’s poems was also published in an anthology hosted by Greece’s Ministry of Culture and Preservation.
Tula Singer
Tula Jiménez Singer, Write the World intern, is a Cuban-American writer and third-year student at Northeastern University. You can read her work on The Green Blotter, The Teen Magazine, The Weight Journal, Indigo Literary Journal, and Coelacanth 2022, among others. In addition to writing and her work with Write the World, she has been an intern at GrubStreet and The Boston Globe, and also works as the Social Media Manager of Spectrum Literary Arts Magazine, the Events Coordinator of Artistry Magazine, and a writer for Woof Magazine.
About Write the World's Online Poetry Camp and Summer Programs
Jump into new genres of writing and connect with campers across the globe in Write the World’s Virtual Writing Camps.
Spend your summer immersed in a virtual community of teen writers from over 100 countries as you experiment with the written word, try your hand at new styles of writing, and work with notable professionals to create pieces you’re proud of… all without leaving your home!
Whether you choose to spend your free time filling journals with poetry and prose or are new to putting your thoughts on paper, we welcome you to join our week-long writing camps across genres in July and August 2026.
Have additional questions? Check out our parent and guardian FAQ’s here (scroll to bottom) or reach out to us at workshops@writetheworld.com to connect!