August 2008 - Page 2 of 3 - A Brave Writer's Life in Brief A Brave Writer's Life in Brief
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A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

Thoughts from my home to yours

Archive for August, 2008

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Copywork and Dictation: How Often?

Copywork and Dictation: How Often?

Common questions from homeschooling parents: what did copywork and dictation look like in your home and how often should it be done?

My response:

My oldest kids are in college (ages 21 and 18). I homeschooled both of them through high school, though the second one went part time to our local high school as well. Our third child is a junior in high school and goes full time. He was homeschooled through 9th grade. We have two more kids: 8th and 7th grades – all homeschooled.

Copywork and dictation can be done more frequently than weekly. The Arrow/Boomerang are designed to support the homeschooling parent, not to replace her own good judgment and her skills as a home educator. In fact, when I first designed the Arrow (which came first), I used to always say that the goal was to model how copywork and dictation can be done (how to select passages, how to teach them, how to make them more meaningful). I fully expected that mothers would then learn how to do it themselves and not need the Arrow any more.

I also included only one passage per week for a couple of reasons:

1) Some parents set out to do copywork/dictation more than a couple times per week and then when they fail to hit their target, they give up and stop doing it all together. I’ve found that copywork/dictation once per week is way better than not doing it at all while holding the ideal of doing it twice or three times or every day of the week. In fact, I’ve found that once a week adds up to a lot of copywork/dictation if done all year.

2) Some of the passages in the Arrow and particularly the Boomerang are long. They benefit from being broken up into multiple days of work.

3) Kids like to pick their own copywork. When the parent selects only one passage per week, kids have the freedom of choosing other passages to copy (song lyrics, poetry, quotes from a beloved book, sayings on refrigerator magnets). That way, you focus on ONE passage, really teach it, and then your kids can select the ones they want.

4) For reluctant writers, it is a lot to ask them to do handwriting work (in a book, for instance), copywork, dictation, freewriting, and any writing project all in a week. The Arrow and Boomerang allow you to feel that you are covering the material necessary to a good language arts program without putting your child through too much pencil trauma.

Brave Writer is different than other programs. I believe firmly in a parent’s role in the homeschool. We are supports to what you do. We offer products that teach you how to teach.

Of course you can do more copywork if you like. When one of my sons was 14, he copied things every day and did special handwriting therapies for his dysgraphia. When my daughter was 11, she didn’t like the passages I picked so she wrote in her journal and her Greek notebook every day, even in summer. On the other hand, one child successfully went straight into Honor’s English without having ever done a formal grammar or spelling program. He learned it all through less than once per week copywork/dictation over his lifetime.

Pay attention to your kids. Do what you believe nourishes them. Let them tell you what is working and what is not. Kids don’t learn as well when they are numb to the subject matter, when they feel obliged to fulfill your expectations without their buy-in. If once a week copywork/dictation is tolerable (even enjoyable) for you kids, they will learn a lot! There’s no reason to think that more is necessarily better.

The Arrow language arts program

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, Dictation and copywork | 4 Comments »

Working hard for you

This summer has been one of those demanding ones where I’ve been deeply involved in the business, but not as able to keep this blog filled with treats for you the way I like to. Right this week, my design team has presented me with the future look of the Brave Writer website and I’m so thrilled, so excited about it, I wish I could share it with you right now. I can’t though. Still, it involves a lot of my time to work on the new world of BW that will nurture and support all of you.

Thanks for your patience. If you have questions or want to share with our BW community, I’ll post them here happily. Just send me an email or comment below. Let me know what would help you!

Posted in General | 1 Comment »

Shaking the dust off writer’s block

I spent some time surfing the web looking for ideas to help us knock open the internal world of words and found some good ideas! So if you and your kids want to kick off the fall with some new ideas (or if you are down under and feeling a little weary going into spring) try these! Here are five writing ideas. Don’t do them all in one day. Space them out over weeks.

  1. Write a collage made up of full-lines of selected source poems. (Choose the poems, grab lines from them, type them up, print them, cut them into strips and then reassemble in a new order to make a new poem! You can certainly add a line of your own if it helps.)
  2. Write a poem composed entirely of questions.
  3. Make notes on what happens or occurs to you for a limited amount of time, then make something of it in writing.(You pick a predetermined amount of time – like an hour or a morning.)
  4. Write on a piece of paper where something is already printed or written. (You might try writing in the margins of a book, or the margins around a photo-copy of a poem, or on the edges of a flyer…)
  5. Type out a Shakespeare sonnet or other poem (or song lyric!) you would like to learn about/imitate double-spaced on a page. Rewrite it in between the lines.

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, Tips for Teen Writers, Writing Exercises, Young Writers | 1 Comment »

Back issues are coming to a website near you :)

I am still working to upload all of the back issues of the Arrow, Boomerang and old Slingshots. They are coming along but I hit a snag yesterday and so we are not ready to click “Send” so that they upload to the site. Not to worry. I’m hopeful we’ll start rolling them out tomorrow with a goal of their being all up on the site by the weekend.

Crossing fingers!

In the meantime, we still have spaces in all the classes, except KWI is almost full. Kidswrite Basic (Session A), Expository Essay and Literary Analysis all begin on August 18 so don’t delay if you want your kids in these! One Thing: Nature Journaling begins on September 15.

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, BW products | 2 Comments »

Wise words to write by

wise words to write be

As mundane as it seems, the truth is that traditional powers that have slipped return to the top with the same principles and practices that made them great. The modern zest for personality contests, motivational speeches, fancy spread offenses or gimmick plays has little to do with the desired result.

Football is a game of leadership, ball security, field position and physical dominance. Positive team expectations are built by establishing deeply ingrained habits in each of those areas. Consistent winning is the product of positive expectation combined with those habits.

—Bill Curry

I feel especially tuned into football lately. (Just in case you didn’t know, I have other talents hidden from the view of most Brave Writer families – I won the Fantasy Football League trophy last year! Boo ya!)

Anyway, I saved this quote for an auspicious moment and here it is.

Let’s translate it for the homeschooling family:

As you look at last year, do you feel you’ve hit a wall and are looking for “a new offense” or a “gimmicky play” that will transform your days into that machine of homeschool efficiency that you admire in your best friend? Have you been sucked into thinking that a prettier school scheduler will make you more conscientious to keep your days recorded and your goals fulfilled?

But homeschooling is more about creating a context for nurturing, leadership, and emotional security; understanding what stage of development your child is in (field position), and intellectual prowess (aptitude to match the tasks set before the child). Positive outcomes are a result of not just positive expectations on the part of the parent, but on the part of the child. A child’s sense of progress comes from increasing competence in each skill-based area. These are the habits of education that you help cultivate through enthusiasm, routine, level-appropriate lessons and a lifestyle of emotional nurturing.

Consistent learning is the result of a happy environment, reasonable expectations, and habits that are not burdensome or tedious. For the Brave Writer family, homeschool is best evaluated in the following categories:

Developmental stage:

What level is your child? Forget age, forget grade level. Look at actual skills. Match the work to the skill level, even if it means slowing way down or moving back a couple of years. Conversely, work that is too easy for the child can be just as inhibiting and demotivating.

Positive environment:

What is the emotional temperature of your home? Are children free to share their real reactions, feelings and ideas? Can they openly state that they are bored, that their work is too hard, that they are too tired from a late night to concentrate? Likewise, do you bring a cheerful, realistic, supportive person to the table when you start the day? Are you undistracted and available to help, support and applaud the work that your kids do?

Habits:

Which practices can you turn into habits that will support the natural growth in any given area? These habits don’t need to be iron-clad laws that suggest punishment more than reward. Rather, what kind of routine will give maximum opportunity for a child to cultivate the skills that will take him or her to the next level? Have you shared the benefits of the practices so that your child can see the point of the work and the direction he or she is pointed? Is there a way to validate growth? Is there a way to mix it up – habits that have a variety of applications so that the practice isn’t endlessly predictable and tedious?

Start here: See if you can look at your homeschool through a different set of eyes this week.

Freewriting Prompts

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, General | 3 Comments »

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