Creative Writing

SFSU student establishes nonprofit organization in memory of her son

Creative Writing major Theresa Thompson promotes literary excellence to children

A San Francisco State University student who has passed down her love of literature and language to her children is now paying it forward to the next generation. Theresa Thompson recently established her own nonprofit organization in honor of her late son, Marcus Angelo Bryant, while entering San Francisco State last year in her late 50s. 

We Theresa’s Kids is a nonprofit promoting literary excellence in middle and high school-age children from underserved areas by teaching them to read, write and understand poetry. The nonprofit provides free classes at public libraries throughout the Bay Area. 

“Our hope is that they seek higher learning, so we want to show them that the library is their sanctuary,” said Thompson, a Creative Writing major and Education minor. Her goal is to become a middle-school teacher in the Oakland Unified School District. 

“Young people struggle in middle school, and I want them to know that someone cares,” she said. “I want them to know that school is a safe place — that you can pour your emotions out on paper, and I won’t judge you.” 

At SFSU, Thompson has landed a work-study position with the Marian Wright Edelman Institute, which promotes early literacy in underserved areas of San Francisco. 

“It has taught me so much about working with young people,” she said. “It’s preparing me for what’s to come. These are all pivotable moments that I’m experiencing at San Francisco State.” 

Thompson keeps a home full of books, sharing her lifelong love for reading and vocabulary in her five children (and, now, nine grandchildren). Bryant was not only an avid reader, but also taught himself Swahili and three dialects of Spanish. He was planning to enter community college before his death in 2023. 
 
“Marcus was the joy of the family, the one who made everyone laugh,” Thompson said. “He was very proud of his home life.” 

Bryant was also an organ donor. Shortly after his memorial service, Thompson wrote poems and a class paper about his sacrifices and channeling her pain, and is writing a fantasy-fiction short story titled “The Sword of Seraphims: The Marcus Angelo Chronicles.” She is now an ambassador for Donor Network West, the organ procurement organization for Northern California and Northern Nevada. 

“I refuse to allow my grief to make me a slave, so I’m going to repurpose my pain and turn it into something else,” she said. “And Marcus repurposed himself. He lost his life, but he saved five lives. And the one thing I’ll never forget is that his heart and one of his lungs went to the same person.” 

Learn more about the Creative Writing Department.

Student script wins national award from Broadcast Education Association

Jae Hamilton wrote raucous speculative episode of U.K. teen sitcom ‘Derry Girls’ 

What started as a class assignment has turned into a national award for a San Francisco State University student who has since graduated. Jae Hamilton is a first-place winner in the Broadcast Education Association (BEA) Festival of Media Arts. Her speculative script for an episode of the U.K. teen sitcom “Derry Girls” brings a raucous yet thoughtful twist to a Catholic girls school in Northern Ireland in the 1990s. 

Hamilton (B.A./B.S., ’22) is among 300 student winners, representing 82 colleges and universities nationwide. They were honored at an awards ceremony at the festival on April 17 in Las Vegas. BEA is a leading international academic media organization that drives insights, excellence in media production and career advancement for educators, students and professionals. 

Hamilton wrote the script last fall as an assignment in Broadcast and Electronic Communication Arts (BECA) 470: “Dramatic Writing for Television and Electronic Media.” The plot takes the “Derry Girls” protagonists to a shop in town where one of the characters gets in a dispute with the owner for overcharging for candy. In the episode’s secondary plotline, Hamilton takes the Derry girls as far from their comfort zone as she thought possible: to a museum exhibition of Robert Mapplethorpe photographs, showcasing his trademark provocative images of nude men. 

“It’s hijinks, but the basis is taking care of your own and standing up for what you feel is injustice,” Hamilton said. “I wrote it because it’s funny, but it’s also about self-acceptance. Even though they are very simple characters, they deal with lots of different emotions and themes.” 

A double major in Visual Communication Design and Creative Writing, Hamilton entered San Francisco State as a transfer student after a career as a theatre props technician in Atlanta. She is pursuing a career in video game design, and her passion is writing plays.  

“Writing is my happy place. It always has been,” Hamilton said.  

Hamilton is not the only member of the SF State community to be honored at the BEA festival. Her BECA 470 instructor from last fall, Associate Professor Marie Drennan, garnered Best of Competition in the Mini-Episodic/Webisode category of the faculty scriptwriting competition. 

Learn more about the SF State Broadcast and Electronic Communication Arts and Creative Writing departments and the SF State School of Design

  

Jae Hamilton selfie while seated in front of a kitchen sink and window