If cats and dolls could talk, what might these two say to each other?
New to freewriting? Check out our online guide.
If cats and dolls could talk, what might these two say to each other?
New to freewriting? Check out our online guide.
Tags: Writing prompts
Posted in Friday Freewrite | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: Cats and Dolls
Need a homeschool tune up but don’t have the energy to drag yourself and your kids to a convention? We gotchu! Stay put with tall glasses of lemonade, your computer screen, and games for the kids.
Summer Camp features 5 identical webinars on Tuesday and Wednesday (with a bonus webinar on Monday afternoon), in different time slots so you can arrange your schedule to suit you (and not have to park yourself in front of the computer for all five in one day). I’ve invited my friends to share helpful information about language arts, the Brave Writer program, and learning challenges.
Plus our Online Summer Camp comes with a free PDF digital handbook that has all the details for how to participate (even games for your kids!).
Monday, July 23 (Bonus Webinar)
4:00 P.M. Open House: A Guided Tour of the Homeschool Alliance (Julie Bogart)
Tuesday, July 24
10:00 A.M. The Writer’s Jungle: How to be an Effective Writing Coach (Julie Bogart)
1:00 P.M. Language Arts: Literature and Mechanics in Brave Writer (Mary Wilson)
4:00 P.M. Are Online Writing Classes Right for My Family? (Kirsten Merryman)
6:00 P.M. Homeschool Writing with a Slew of Kids (Julie Bogart)
8:00 P.M. Tackle Learning Challenges in Writing and Reading (Rita Cevasco)
Wednesday, July 25
10:00 A.M. Are Online Writing Classes Right for My Family? (Kirsten Merryman)
1:00 P.M. Language Arts: Literature and Mechanics in Brave Writer (Mary Wilson)
4:00 P.M. Homeschool Writing with a Slew of Kids (Julie Bogart)
6:00 P.M. Tackle Learning Challenges in Writing and Reading (Rita Cevasco)
8:00 P.M. The Writer’s Jungle: How to be an Effective Writing Coach (Julie Bogart)
These sessions are LIVE only (no replay) so you want to be sure you sign up for the time slot you can attend.
GRAND PRIZE
Everyone who registers we’ll automatically be entered into a drawing for…drum roll please:
An iPad with special engraving!
The iPad will feature the winner’s name and Brave Writer on the back.
Photo Prize
We’re awarding the collection of Gracious Space books and our Poetry Teatime Companion to the family who posts our favorite Instagram image during Summer Camp (hashtag #bravewritercamp).
Swag Prizes
In each webinar, we’ll draw several winners to receive stickers, pens, and bookmarks for you and your kids. Tune in live, participate in the chat, and you’ll be eligible to win!
Posted in Webinars | Comments Off on Brave Writer Summer Camp 2018
Welcome to the latest blog roundup! See how other homeschooling families practice the Brave Writer Lifestyle!
This roundup in particular is special because June is Nature Study Month here at Brave Writer.
Nature Study for the Mom Who Isn’t a Big Fan of Nature – Hide the Chocolate
The Best Nature Journaling Books for Creativity and Inspiration – My Little Poppies
Nature Study Simplified: Identify, Observe, And Journal – Bethany Ishee
Nature Study (When You Don’t Know What You’re Doing!) – Up Above the Rowan Tree
Nature Journaling for Kids Who Aren’t That Excited About It – This Simple Balance
Tour of Our Homeschool Room: Spring Edition – Blossom and Root
Nature Journaling in Our Homeschool – Our Domestic Church
We hope to share more roundups in the future! If you write about an aspect of the Brave Writer Lifestyle, let us know! Email your post’s url to [email protected]
Thanks!
Receive Brave Writer Lifestyle tips in your inbox for each theme below
PLUS a free hand-lettered PDF download by Julie!
Posted in Brave Writer Lifestyle, BW Blog Roundup | Comments Off on Blog Roundup: Nature Study
We LOVE a good book list here at Brave Writer! Check these books out from your local library, or head to the bookstore, and get your kiddos in the summery spirit.
[This post contains Amazon affiliate links. When you click on those links to make purchases,
Brave Writer receives compensation at no extra cost to you. Thank you!]
With the exception of the first section, the titles have an accompanying Brave Writer’s mechanics and literature programs, and we’ve linked to them below.
WEE ONES
LITTLES
MIDDLERS
TEENS
Posted in Living Literature | Comments Off on Books for Summertime
Lonely thoughts: am I doing it right? Doing enough? What if I fail?
Lonely days: you and your kids slogging through, no one entering your house to give you relief, no one else planning a lesson or setting up the art project or supervising PE while you take a break in the teacher’s lounge.
Lonely outings: a field trip of 5—you and your three kids—in a sea of school children and teachers, or alternatively, the only person with kids in tow while people wonder what they’re doing “out of school.”
Lonely self: wanting friends, not sure who will be your friend, wondering how to find them, make them, keep them, coordinate with them, manage the interactions between your kids and theirs, how to fit in when you don’t have the same philosophy or religion or educating style.
It’s a creeping need—at first, the joy of choosing to spend all day every day with your kids is rewarding, fulfilling, and need-meeting. Over time, the craving for adult contact and affirmation becomes profound, powerful, necessary.
The Internet helps—online conversations can tie us together and give us a place to gather—our own water cooler.
Co-ops help—offering a place for parents to chat while kids get instruction you didn’t have to prepare.
Yet it’s more than that.
Can we say our truths, our worries, our different opinions and still be accepted and known by the other homeschoolers? Can we share about our philosophy of education without it raising suspicion or creating rifts?
And what if you are not in the majority homeschooling community? What if you come from a different faith or no faith? How do you find friends then?
The hardest part of homeschooling for me was the feeling that I had to qualify to be a member of a given group. The rejection, scrutiny, and exclusion I’ve experienced while homeschooling was excruciating and not unique to me. I know homeschoolers who gave up home education because they literally had no options for community involvement.
If you are a human being, your beliefs will shift over a lifetime. It’s impossible to guarantee that what you believe is true now will remain in the same configuration for the rest of your life. If you home educate, you are examining those beliefs daily (because you are studying, reading, and discussing ideas all day every day).
When we form groups around beliefs, we teach people to pretend. We say that you must deny the part of yourself that is curious or disturbed or doubts in order to retain membership in the community. That kind of group fosters vigilance to uphold a single perspective, where suspicion becomes a mode of operation rather than support and kindness. Suddenly the strictures of the group become more important than building supportive relationships around home education.
The best homeschool friendships weather change—create space to revise, grow, experiment, and explore—in education models, in parenting-styles, in belief systems.
The weakest friendships are built around reinforcing the party-line—and avoiding the discomfort of difference.
The greatest suffering occurs when someone fails to live up to the group’s stated beliefs and is kicked out or shunned or rejected (or is told that their family is now dangerous to others—that one hurt me the most).
We can cure loneliness in homeschool. We do it by building communities that welcome people committed to the daring adventure of bringing education to life for their children. That’s the ground floor of friendship.
Everything else? Fodder for rich conversations over brunch and mimosas at Mimi’s.
Posted in Homeschool Advice | Comments Off on Homeschooling is Lonely
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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