
Engage with Nature: Week 2

Scientific exploration, including nature study, is an integral part of the Brave Writer Lifestyle.
To encourage you to add or maintain nature study routines, we created twenty simple prompts to help you and yours engage with nature.
Each Friday in April, we’ll share five simple ideas.
Pick one to do the following week, then let us know what you did by sharing on Instagram (tag us: @bravewriterofficial).
Ideas for Week 2
- Play a bird spotting game (big birds = 3, medium birds = 2, small birds = 1). See if, as a family, you can add up to a target number before the end of the day.
- Get outside WITH the kids! Yep, this is a BIG motivator!
- Pick a tree in your neighborhood to watch through the seasons.
- Read a nature-inspired storybook—wonder as you read.
- Find and watch nature webcams (search the web to variety—nest cams are popular).
See Other Ideas Here
Instead of busy, what if life were FULL?
Every so often, we’ll give you a peek into Brave Learner Home, our supportive online community. Today’s post features an encouraging message by Dawn Smith (President of Brave Writer) that she recently shared.
There’s a word I used to catch myself mindlessly saying, and I hear it everywhere. Someone asks how life is going, and out comes: “Busy.” It just slips right out. But when my kids were still quite young, I started using a different word, and it changed something for me.
Busy or FULL?
There’s something about the idea of fullness that shifted my perspective.
- A full day of exploring nature with my kids.
- A full pantry and a table filled with good food.
- A house full of experiments, innovation, and learning.
It’s the same mound of laundry growing with each muddy nature walk, the same need to feed endlessly hungry mouths, and the same pile of cardboard, tape, and markers scattered all over the floor, but full days feel like something to cherish, rather than something to endure.
As you lean into this season, I encourage you to look for the fullness in your days. When you reflect on your homeschool year this way, even assessment shifts. Instead of something to get through, it becomes a reflection on everything that filled your days. It’s a chance to see what your family actually did, what your kids learned, and what surprised you.
That’s not a daunting task to endure. That’s a gift to cherish.
The Heart of Education
I believe in a pedagogy (the method and practice of teaching) that puts these three things at the center:
- Curiosity
- Learning
- Questions
I don’t believe in a pedagogy that starts with a viewpoint and then hunts and pecks for support to protect that perspective.
One is critical thinking and the other is apologetics.
We’re all capable of both, every day of our lives. It takes self-awareness to be able to recognize when you are being an apologist rather than a thinker. It’s the temptation of an ideologue. Being beholden to a belief system is dangerous to critical thought.
The hardest thing I’ve ever done is confront my need for the evidence to support what I want to be true. I’ve experienced the internal battle, the anxiety, the fear of losing meaning and friends. I’ve had to rethink so many of my assumptions over the years. There have been costs associated with that rethinking. But I wouldn’t change the journey.
If you are going through a season of rethinking, congratulations. It takes courage. It’s the heart of what education is all about.
[Podcast #334] Rescuing Reluctant Writers: Brave Writer Online Classes
What if an online writing class didn’t mean Zoom fatigue, rigid schedules, or one more thing to manage?
In this Brave Writer podcast episode, Melissa Wiley talks with Kirsten Merryman about what makes Brave Writer’s online classes so different: asynchronous discussions, text-based coaching, warm instructor feedback, and a structure that makes room for all kinds of learners.
We explore:
- how real writing growth happens,
- why parents learn right alongside their kids,
- and which classes might be the best fit for your family, from Story Switcheroo to Essay Prep.
Kirsten Merryman is Brave Writer’s Vice President of Operations and former director of online classes. She is also a longtime homeschooler, writing coach, and curriculum creator who has helped shape Brave Writer’s approach to supporting both parents and young writers.
Join us to discover how writing support can feel personal, practical, and surprisingly freeing.
Show Notes
What Makes Writing Instruction Actually Work?
Every homeschooling parent has felt it: your child has something interesting to say, but the moment writing begins, the struggle starts.
What should be an act of expression can quickly turn into frustration, avoidance, or tears. It can feel tempting to focus on the obvious fixes, grammar, punctuation, spelling, structure. But what if strong writing begins somewhere else entirely?
The truth is, writing growth doesn’t start with correction. It starts with connection.
When children feel safe to put words on the page, when they know a reader is genuinely interested in what they mean, writing begins to open up. That shift can change everything.
Writing Is More Than Mechanics
It’s easy to think of good writing as clean writing.
We want our kids to use correct punctuation, organize their thoughts, vary sentence structure, and produce polished final drafts. Those skills matter. They help writing communicate clearly.
But mechanics are not the heart of writing.
The heart of writing is having something to say and believing it is worth saying. Children need space to discover their ideas before they can refine them. They need to experience writing as communication, not just as a performance of correctness.
That’s why messy first drafts matter. Real writers do not sit down and produce polished work in one pass. They draft, rethink, revise, and shape their language over time.
When we expect children to do everything at once, think of something meaningful, express it clearly, spell it correctly, punctuate it properly, and organize it neatly, we often make writing feel heavier than it needs to be.
Response Builds Confidence
One of the most powerful things we can offer young writers is a real reader.
When someone responds to a child’s writing with interest, something shifts. A comment like “This made me laugh,” or “I can really picture this,” or “You taught me something here,” does more than encourage. It helps the child see that writing has a purpose.
They are not just completing an assignment. They are reaching another human being.
That kind of response builds confidence. It also teaches. When children hear what is working in their writing, they begin to recognize their own strengths. They start to notice voice, detail, humor, rhythm, and insight.
This is often more useful at the beginning than a long list of corrections.
Once a child feels invested in their own words, revision starts to make sense. Improving the writing no longer feels like punishment. It feels like making something meaningful stronger.
Practical Ways to Support Writing at Home
Small shifts in how we respond to writing can make a big difference.
One helpful practice is to read as a reader first. Before correcting anything, notice what stands out to you.
You might:
- point out a vivid word or phrase
- mention a line that made you smile
- reflect back an idea that felt strong or surprising
- ask a curious question about something they wrote
Another useful approach is to separate drafting from editing. Let your child get the ideas out first. Save grammar, spelling, and punctuation for later passes.
It also helps to let children write about topics they truly care about. When a child is invested in the subject, they are far more willing to stay with the process.
Even reluctant writers often have strong opinions, deep interests, or a quirky sense of humor waiting to show up on the page.
The Real Goal
Many of us were taught to approach writing as correction first. We learned to look for what was wrong before we noticed what was alive.
But strong writing instruction begins by helping children experience themselves as writers.
That means noticing effort. It means honoring risk. It means looking for the spark in a rough draft and trusting that polish can come later.
Our goal is not simply to produce error-free papers.
Our goal is to help children develop fluency, ownership, and confidence so they can grow into writers who know they have something to say.
And when that happens, the mechanics become easier to teach, because the child is no longer just trying to finish.
They are trying to communicate.
Resources
- Explore our upcoming Brave Writer class schedule
- Got questions about classes? Reach out to us at help@bravewriter.com
- Find our favorite books for kids and parents in the Brave Writer Book Shop
- Visit Julie’s Substack to find her special podcast for kids (and a lot more!)
- Purchase Julie’s new book, Help! My Kid Hates Writing
- Find community at the Brave Learner Home
- Learn more about the Brave Writer Literature & Mechanics programs
- Start a free trial of CTCmath.com to try the math program that’s sure to grab and keep your child’s attention
- Subscribe to Julie’s Substack newsletters, Brave Learning with Julie Bogart and Julie Off Topic, and Melissa’s Catalog of Enthusiasms
- Sign up for our Text Message Pod Ring to get podcast updates and more!
- Send us podcast topic ideas by texting us: +1 (833) 947-3684
- Interested in advertising with us? Reach out to media@bravewriter.com
Connect with Julie
- Instagram: @juliebogartwriter
- Threads: @juliebogartwriter
- Bluesky: @bravewriter.com
- Facebook: facebook.com/bravewriter
Connect with Melissa
- Website: melissawiley.com
- Substack: melissawiley.substack.com
- Instagram: @melissawileybooks
- Bluesky: @melissawiley.bsky.social
Produced by NOVA
Harness the Energy of Home
“What is most important and valuable about the home as a base for children’s growth into the world is not that it is a better school than the schools, but that it isn’t a school at all.” ―John Holt
It is a truth universally acknowledged that a child in possession of a good instructor must be in want of an education.
Alas, kids don’t care.
It’s impossible to demand inspiration, passion, or self-discipline without affinity for learning.
Let me rephrase that: You can’t coerce caring!
Though adults try. We use grades, little statues, and ice cream sundaes to prod kids into reading, diagramming sentences, and practicing piano. Meanwhile, that same child will stand in the hot sun for five hours shooting free throws to break a personal record.
No reward except satisfaction.
How do we get more of that into traditional school subjects?
A happy house for homeschool is one where every inch is used for learning, messes are welcomed, people are more precious than furnishings, and household maintenance is a varying standard with fluctuating amounts of help. And we’re all okay with it most of the time.
To have more effective home education, I realized I needed to abandon the trappings of school and harness the energy of home.
Planning Jam Session: Week One
Need help using Brave Writer’s Mechanics & Literature guides? Watch the recorded live below and plan your first week with Dawn Smith!
Also, before watching, you might open your current Dart, Arrow, Boomerang, or Slingshot and:
- Print the “Our Week With” planner (see guide or Guidelines)
- Print the Skills Tracker (see guide or Guidelines)
- Prep the guide you are using by printing or having the PDF open to review
- Open the Guidelines PDF for reference.
Next, simply hit play and get started!
Resources
- Painting the Game Dart: https://bravewriter.com/book-shop/boo…
- Literature & Mechanics programs: (Dart, Arrow, Boomerang, Slingshot): https://store.bravewriter.com/collect…
- Podcast with Melissa: https://blog.bravewriter.com/podcast-…
- Growing Brave Writers: https://bravewriter.com/products/grow…
- Writing Projects: https://store.bravewriter.com/collect…
- Literature Singles: https://store.bravewriter.com/collect…
- Search & Sort Spreadsheet: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/…
- Tools for the Art of Writing: https://bravewriter.com/book-shop/lis…
- Brave Learner Home: https://bravewriter.com/brave-learner…
- Freewriting: https://bravewriter.com/program/brave…
- Contact support: https://bravewriter.com/about/contact-us
- Learn more about Brave Writer: https://bravewriter.com/






















