Friday Freewrite: What would you do if you were in charge?
Archive for September, 2012
Twitter Party for Brave Writer TODAY!
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Free Kindle!
Amazon Gift Cards!
Join me on Twitter today!
Today, September 14, 2012, I’ll be a part of a Twitter Party hosted by Girlfriendology.
We’ll be discussing home business and home schooling under the hashtag #GFWeekend. Between 3:00 and 4:00 pm Eastern.
http://twitter.com/BraveWriter
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If you were planning to take an online class this fall, SIGN UP SOON!
Classes are filling up easily this year, and I hate having to tell excited parents that the class they want is closed.
Advanced Composition 1 Instructor: Julie Bogart
- October 15 – November 9, 2012
Foundations in WritingInstructor: Rita Cesvasco, MA:
- October 1 – November 9, 2012
Just So StoriesInstructor: Jeannette Frantz
- October 15 – November 9, 2012
Kidswrite BasicInstructors: Jeannette Frantz
- November 5 – December 14, 2012
Kidswrite IntermediateInstructors: Jeannette Frantz
- October 8 – November 16, 2012
MLA Research EssayInstructor: Susanne Barrett
- October 8 – November 16, 2012
Mini-ReportsInstructor: Christine Gable:
- October 8 to November 2, 2012
- November 5 – 30, 2012
Nature JournalingInstructor: Christine Gable:
- October 8 to November 2, 2012
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Call me or text me (513) 307-1405 or email me. I want to help you pick the right classes!
See you online!
P.S. Twitter party for Brave Writer at 3:00 pm Eastern TODAY!! #GFWeekend
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Interview with Author Melissa Wiley
Today’s podcast (podcast player at the bottom of this entry) features children’s author and home educator, Melissa Wiley.
Melissa and I met in 2005 online and instantly formed a wonderful connection around writing and homeschool. Her most recent children’s novel, The Prairie Thief, is the featured title for the October Arrow. You may purchase it here: The Prairie Thief at Amazon.com
Check out Melissa’s website and blog, too. Her blog, Here in the Bonny Glen, is a treasure trove of home education insight, poetry sharing, and reviews of her favorite children’s books. You might enjoy reading her entry titled “Hurrah for Brave Writer,” too.

I loved my conversation with Melissa so much, we rolled right by our usual 30 minute time limit and chatted for nearly an hour! I hope you enjoy getting to know Melissa as much as I have. We’re offering a special deal for the issue of The Arrow that goes with The Prairie Thief, which will be published on October 1, 2012.
If you’d like to purchase The Prairie Thief Arrow go here.
The Arrow is a monthly digital product that features copywork and dictation passages from a specific read aloud novel. It’s geared toward children ages 8-11 and is an indispensable tool for parents who want to teach language arts in a natural, literature-bathed context.
Friday Freewrite: Tough choices
Write about a difficult decision you’ve made and why.
Take back our power in language
It’s about time we take back our power in language. We are not controlled by Mrs. Cox, the ghost of public school past sitting on our left shoulders. We are free. We are at home. Let’s figure out how to make writing a freeing, liberating, sparkly experience, shall we?
You know how we let our kids take apart an old phone or toaster to see how it’s made, to learn how to use a screw driver, and to have the satisfaction of working on a “real” household item? That’s a great thing, isn’t it? Little screws lying on the ground, bits of wire, the metal tray, the coils that heat… It’s amazing to see it in pieces and to marvel at the fact that someone knew how to put these bits of metal and wire together to make a tool that burns our toast! Taking the toaster apart is more effective to teach us about the toaster than studying it in a book or even making toast, right?
Some of us have rooms dedicated to art exploration—a similar freedom to discover. We might keep an easel, paints and brushes available any time, a tray of pastels or colored pencils, and stacks of scratch paper.
Still others of us will collect musical instruments—percussion and piano, recorders and flutes, and two kinds of guitars! Or maybe we’re the kind of family who has a whole slew of balls, frisbees, hockey sticks, hoops, and goals available to practice a favorite sport or to learn a new one.
We know that play and exploration produce learning.
By contrast, we’re reluctant to play with, take apart, explore, and mess with language. Why? I don’t know. Perhaps it’s the grammar hangover from school where teachers are more about accuracy than inspiration.
What if your house had an accuracy-free play-zone for words? What would be in it? How about a variety of writing utensils (gel pens, fountain pens, markers, sidewalk chalk, calligraphy quills, crayons, lipstick)? How about some unique writing surfaces (butcher paper taped in a big sheet to a wall, dry erase board, chalkboard, clipboard, various sizes of lined paper, cards, notecards, postcards, an iPad, a mirror, colored paper)?
How about making a stack of notecards with all the words you like—a whole big mixture of words you collect for a week, one per card?
How about putting individual punctuation marks on notecards (a comma card, a period card, an exclamation point card, a quotation marks card, a question marks card – or several of each!)? Then use your word notecards to make a sentence and lay the punctuation marks where you want them to go. Walk around the room and lay them out on the floor. If you want, you can use big poster boards rather than tiny notecards.
Begin by punctuating it all wrong, first. See what happens when you start a sentence with a period or an exclamation point? What if you put one in the middle of the sentence?
What new uses of these marks can you think of?
Are you getting the idea? Language is not meant to be treated like an antiseptic vaccine. It’s a toy! Play with it! See what happens. Discover how the pieces of language and writing work together to create meaning and joy, communication and inspiration.
Top Image by Virginia State Parks (cc cropped, tinted, text added)