Archive for the ‘Audio of Julie’ Category

12 Englishes

Monday, February 11th, 2013

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Today’s podcast discusses the relationship between speech and writing. For those of you who are long-term Brave Writer fans, you’ll know that I refer to Dr. Peter Elbow as “my guru.” His vision for writing has long guided how I teach. When this new book Vernacular Eloquence hit the stores, it was thrilling to realize that Brave Writer has already captured and honed these very insights, but in the most practical way. We urge the kind of linguistic development Dr. Elbow examines in his research in this volume.

He and I have since dialogued about the way Brave Writer has evolved and explored that relationship through the most unique, yet effective context for writing growth: the parent-child editor-writer relationship.

The podcast today is about how to foster the various voices/registers needed for the variety of writing tasks our kids will face. How do we help them move between what Elbow calls “Edited Written English” (EWE) and the spoken language they use orally and in writing (online, in casual correspondence, when writing for popular audiences)?

Elbow says that EWE is “Shorthand: [for] ‘no mistakes.” This need to avoid mistakes is the key source of paralysis in the writing endeavor as many of you well know. Our aim to free the original writing impulse to come forth without undue pressure is what makes Brave Writer’s approach to writing different than other writing strategies.

Elbow goes on:

Students are constantly warned not to confuse their everyday speech with ‘serious’ writing. EWE or standardized written English is a dialect or language that differs in grammar and register from everyday speech.

He continues:

When students and others follow traditional advice and try for correctness at every moment, their language is often stiff, awkward, and unclear. Their attempts sometimes even lead them to the kind of peculiar mistakes people make when they try to use a language they don’t know well. Because of this, many people try to play it safe and stick to relatively simple sentences. When teachers look at student texts with this kind of simplified or plodding language, they sometimes blame speech—when really is was fear of speech that impoverished the syntax. When people let themselves genuinely speak onto the page, their language is more flexible and complex and sometimes eloquent.

Join Noah and me for a discussion of how these various “Englishes” manifest in the homeschool and what you can do to help support fluency in all of them.

11 One Thing Principle

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2013

One Thing! I’ve written about the One Thing Principle many times on the blog. Today, though, I wanted to share with you in more detail about how to get that fantasy homeschool you imagine into the real world of your routine family practice. Noah shares about our family and what we did that he remembers and I am hoping that my comments will ease some of the frustration and doubt that get in the way of enjoying your time at home with your kids.

And forgive the silly picture. My business photo shoot included these shots of me with the numbers 1, 2, and 3 for possible inclusion in marketing materials. They turned out really silly… but then, maybe silly is a little bit what’s missing for all of us in this serious business of raising, nurturing, and educating our kids.

Please feel free to post questions about your unique family situation below or to share some successes. We don’t have a forum any more and I know your input does help those who are learning this brave new way of living.

10 Podcast: Eavesdropping on the Great Conversation

Sunday, December 2nd, 2012

Podcasting

Finally!! We are at the end of our series “The Natural Stages of Growth in Writing.” This podcast features discussion about the high school writing life, on into college. Don’t miss it! It will help to shape your philosophy of writing, not just your program for writing. Enjoy!

08 Conversation with Rita Cevasco

Wednesday, September 5th, 2012

This podcast discusses the role of the brain in writing as well as how to teach the mechanics in a way that actually leads to their incorporation in the original writing task. Be sure, too, to sign up for Rita’s Class: Foundations in Writing. It starts October 1 and always fills up so don’t miss it, if you want to enroll your family. One price for everyone!

Enjoy.

07 Transition to Ownership Part 2

Monday, August 20th, 2012

Hi everyone!

This is our 7th podcast, 5th in the series related to the Natural Stages of Growth in writing. We started discussing the Transition to Ownership in podcast 06 and this is the second half of that conversation. You’ll want to listen to that half first. We continue our discussion of your role in the “Big Juicy Conversations” you need to be having with your fledgling thinkers. Please post your questions about your child in our comments section.

Enjoy!

06 Transition to Ownership

Sunday, July 29th, 2012

This is our first of a two part discussion of the Transition to Ownership stage of writing growth. This is the time when your 13-14 year olds (8th-9th graders) are making the somewhat treacherous journey from adorable, fact-centered child to rhetorical imagination (the awareness that the world is inhabited by unlimited numbers of perspectives). Noah helps me make this discussion especially engaging.

We’re having a great time making these podcasts (we hope many of you are listening). Share them around, please! I find myself utterly charmed by the chance to express all this build up of thinking I’ve cultivated over 13 years of writing instruction and ponderings. Let me know what you think and pose your questions in the comments.

Quick footnote: there are a couple of gaffes – the way there are when you record yourself mid-roll talking. For instance, I say “posterior” baby when I mean “post-term”! :)

05 Faltering Ownership

Saturday, July 21st, 2012

Today’s podcast features the characteristics of writers between the ages of 10-12. Join us as we look at how you can create the conditions for growth and joy in writing with your kids.

04 Partnership Writing Stage of Development

Tuesday, June 19th, 2012

We press on! This week’s podcast is the second in the series where we look at each of the natural developmental stages of growth in writing. This particular episode focuses on the most overlooked stage of development in the writing journey and accounts for the development of writer’s block and writing resistance in kids. If you successfully navigate the Partnership Writing phase, your kids will not be plagued with the “blank page, blank stare” syndrome. You’ll both know how to create writing and what role you each play in the process. Enjoy.

Julie

03 Jot It Down Stage of Development

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012

This week’s podcast is the first in a series where we look at each of the natural developmental stages of growth in writing. In my years of working with families, I’ve found that it is much more effective to look at how writers grow naturally than to focus on scope and sequence, grade level, ages, or the types of writing that ought to be done in some “established sequence.” Learn more about how to identify where your children are in that course of development and take the stress away from the writing journey you share with each other.

Julie

02 Manage the Damage

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

Our second podcast features a discussion between Noah and me. We look at how a parent can help a child understand the value of writing in his or her life rather than resenting or resisting it. Noah shares memories from when we worked on writing together when he was young.

And we added intro music. :) This is too fun.

Julie

P.S. Listened to it just now and we lost a 30 second bit where Noah signs off and invites all of you to post your questions and comments on the blog or Facebook. I’m happy to help with specific family situations so please do post! He and I are just getting the hang of this, but I can already tell that I love this venue for communicating with you. If you have topics you’d like me to cover, feel free to post those in the comments as well.