Write a conversation your toes might have.
New to freewriting? Check out our online guide.
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Welcome to Brave Writer! You made it. This is where the magic happens. We’re all about:
There are no right answers. There are only attempts to create your own rhythm, style, and routine. We’re here to help you find what works for you!
Brave Writer is a program of interconnecting parts. You can’t mess it up.
If you’re brand new to us, though, here are some posts, podcasts, and resources that might help you learn more about our philosophy and practices.
Understanding our view of education is THE most important step in implementing the Brave Writer program in your home!
Discover which stage of writing your child is in. It’s 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.”
Homeschool sanity depends on working as a family as much as possible. Fortunately, Brave Writer accommodates that need beautifully with its products and classes that work with multiple levels of students at the same time.
Decide which Brave Writer products will work for your unique homeschooling family.
Take Brave Writer’s natural and lifestyle-oriented approach to living language arts and incorporate it into your family life. And for a start, do our 7-Day Writing Blitz! It will give you a feel for how the Brave Writer Lifestyle might look in your home.
Start with the product or idea that piques your curiosity or inspires you or seems to meet your need. Ignore the others for now.
The Brave Learner Home provides coaching from the Brave Writer team and me. It’s the one-stop Internet community sandbox for home education. We’ll do it together, one month at a time, one subject or child at a time, making sure that you can see and measure your progress.
Together we will build a community that supports your risk-taking choices, that applauds your successes, and empathizes with your struggles.
Posted in Brave Writer Lifestyle, Brave Writer Philosophy, Homeschool Advice | Comments Off on Are You New to Brave Writer?
There seem to be two ways to be in the world that inspire others: to be a permission-giver and to be a challenger.
Permission-givers help people know that where they find themselves right now is okay: that their intuition, their needs, their return to self (awareness, care, regard), their pain—all of these are valid and valuable.
Permission-givers offer rest from striving.
Challengers call people out of habit and complacency into a new sense of self. Challengers inspire people to aspire to goals that previously seemed impossible or too big.
Challengers offer energy for striving.
The best companions on life’s journey offer both. They know that sometimes it is better to wait and give comfort than to challenge, and other times it is better to support the despair and doubt while sticking with a practice or a change or an effort to make it to the end goal.
The biggest experiences in life benefit from permission and challenge, balanced back and forth.
The danger is to assume that when pain is present, there is only one way to address it. The trick is knowing when to give permission, and when to offer support to meet a challenge.
I’ve found that sometimes the only way to know which to offer is to test one or the other and see what happens.
Challenge can be greeted by complaint—that doesn’t mean it’s the wrong choice.
Permission can be greeted by relief—that doesn’t mean it’s the right choice.
I like to take a bird’s eye view of the situation and consider a bigger picture. Some of the aspects of that picture might be:
For instance, if you have a child who is struggling to read, a permission-giver may say,
“It will come in time. We’ll revisit this again in 6 months. Let’s listen to audio books.”
That may be perfect for your 6, 7 year old.
For your 8, 9 year old, the goal to read has become more important. The longer the child goes without reading, the more chances there are that the child feels like she’s failing or missing out on a universal experience.
A challenger might say,
“I see your struggle. I’m here to support you each day as we break this task into manageable increments. Let’s only work on reading after you’ve had a good breakfast, alone with me, for ten minutes per day. We’ll check it off on the calendar. We’ll get more help if we need it.”
The goal (reading) matters, and should not be abandoned. Permission to recover, to take time off, to feel frustrated—super important. Challenge to keep going, to have a companion on the journey, to adopt a practical strategy: also super important.
We want to toggle between these in home education and listen to our kids’ feedback, and always take it seriously.
Posted in Homeschool Advice | Comments Off on Permission-Givers and Challengers
Head’s up! These classes are at the lowest prices they’ll be all year. If you’ve got your eye on any one of the classes listed in the summer session, nab it now. Tuition goes up in the fall.
We’ve got a slew of good classes available! Here’s the summer class schedule:
Comic Strip Capers
Jun 19 – Jul 14, 2017
Melissa Wiley
Write for Fun: Go Wild
Jun 26 – Jul 14, 2017
Karen O’Connor
Kidswrite Intermediate
Jul 3 – Aug 11, 2017
Samantha Burtner
Kidswrite Intermediate
Jul 3 – Aug 11, 2017
Joy Sherfey
Movie Club: Miyazaki
Jul 3 – Jul 28
Johannah Bogart
Fan Fiction
Jul 10 – Aug 4, 2017
Susanne Barrett
SAT/ACT Essay Class
Jul 10 – Aug 4, 2017
Jean Hall
Expository Essay Class: Exploratory & Persuasive
Jul 10 – Aug 18, 2017
Lora Fanning
Kidswrite Basic
Jul 10 – Aug 18, 2017
Deb Bell
Kidswrite Basic
Jul 10 – Aug 18, 2017
April Hensley
We’re excited to have you join us!
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Imagine that, instead of walking or running, we danced everywhere we went. What might be the pros and cons to that?
New to freewriting? Check out our online guide.
Posted in Friday Freewrite | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: Dancing
I’m a homeschooling alum -17 years, five kids. Now I run Brave Writer, the online writing and language arts program for families. More >>
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