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Writing(s) was created to be an observatory and a place of exchange that will be a go-to resource for research, teaching and the artistic practice of writing. We promote initiatives directed, first of all, to the public in general (i.e. to all those people who have a desire to broaden their education in the art of writing) and, secondly, to teachers and creators (both amateur and professional).

Writing(s) Foundation begins with the premise that all human beings, by nature, are tellers of stories who are able to maintain an active and creative relationship with poetry and with the diverse languages of artistic expression. This capacity, which is central to the integral education of any person, has in general been greatly neglected by educational institutions. For example, our great-grandparents, even though many were illiterate, were able to retell stories in a much more expressive, suggestive and effective manner than the generations that followed them. This impoverishment in the use of language in recent decades is a worldwide problem, and is one of the greatest concerns of the institutions that regulate and direct educational institutions.

If we add to this the transformation that is occurring in written language, the situation begins to look ever more difficult to resolve. For its part, Writing(s) Foundation seeks to collaborate in the clarification of the deeper conflict and in possible strategies to resolve it. This explains the "s" in parenthesis in the Foundation's name: the evidence that at the moment of its founding (in the middle of the second decade of the 21st century) written language is undergoing a radical transformation. On the one hand, writing is becoming more widespread: it is rapidly supplanting many kinds of exchanges that were once carried out orally (e. g. telephone conversations). On the other hand, this is a "broadened" writing, one which unfolds in a new language, a hybrid language where words, photographs, images in motion, sounds, emoticons and other graphic resources coexist in a natural way, in a new context characterized by great interactiveness.

One need only observe how the general population uses a communication tool like SMS or WhatsApp, where people with only a slight familiarity with the technology begin to mix the written word with all kinds of image and audiovisual resources (often created by the user him or herself) to become aware that radical changes in written language are occurring at an accelerated pace.

One might wonder about the effect of this transformation upon literary creation: for instance, how will writers relate to this "written" language, when it needs to be reconstructed with a certain fidelity in the context of a narration that will be read on a screen page? Will they use images? Videos? Will they learn and use the complicated weave of graphic icons that today aid in written communication? In what language above languages will our writers be writing in?

And, perhaps most importantly, how will institutions that are slow in their reactions relate to this new reality, which changes ever more rapidly—although on occasions this results in a fortunate delay—, institutions such as the school, the university, the educational establishment? Children and adolescents begin to write with great fluency, taking advantage of all the new resources for expression offered by this broadened concept of writing that is proper to screen pages. It is, in fact, their language, is it they who are guiding its rapid evolution, anticipating uses that are later employed by adults. What is the role of professors of language who are sensitive to this new scene? Do they have, for example, knowledge about the photographic and audiovisual language needed for guiding their pupils in the use of this broader kind of writing—writing(s)—, languages that those pupils are already using for their daily communication?

These questions lead us to choose the new writing methods proper to screen pages—pages of light, in contrast with paper pages, which today are losing ground—as one of our central objects of study and research. We also have the objective of analysing and debating with teachers and professors about strategies for incorporating reflection and the use of this new linguistic reality in the realm of teaching, as well as trying to provide with working tools all those who decide to take on the teaching challenge involved in this new scenario.

In conclusion, it isn't hard to detect that all the elements for producing an evolution are being brought together—indeed, already taken for granted in the popular realm of written communication—, an evolution that will continue to radically transform the use of written resources. Thus, it seems clear that writing will continue to adapt, more and more, to what the new devices have to offer. In any case, we would be witnessing the emergence of a new language: nobody yet knows what rules shape it, and thanks to the people, in a broad sense, it is still undergoing creation and evolution. And, for the first time in the history of humanity, this language creation is occurring on a global scale in a truly collaborative fashion.

Writing(s) Foundation seeks, in this context, to both serve as a global observatory and to establish international relationships with other institutions that are also working in the direction we are proposing. With this intention in mind, in its first phase Writing(s) Foundation is formed of two branches, one intended for the English-speaking world and the other for the Spanish-speaking world.

Before finishing this presentation we must clarify that, faced with the disquieting process of the virtualization of life that the ongoing technological revolution brings with it, and far from just emphasising the technological factor—key to the development of the new languages that are proper to screen pages or light pages—, Writing(s) Foundation will prioritize proposals that enjoy a greater relationship with the tangible world, privileging creative activities and strategies that obligate participants to relate to the physical environment of people: family, neighbourhood, town, workplace, teaching center, etc. as well as strategies for collaborative work that promote a direct, non-virtual relationship between persons.