October 2022 - Page 3 of 4 - 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 October, 2022

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Webinar: Get to Know Brave Writer

Brave Writer
  • Is your Language Arts program not working?
  • Kids bored? Disengaged?
  • Are you worried they will “fall behind” in writing?

Brave Writer offers a totally unique approach to teaching writing.

Engage your kids. Grow confident writers.

We can help!

Join us for a FREE webinar:

Get to Know Brave Writer

Tuesday, November 15, 2022 at 3:00 PM Eastern 

Dawn Smith, Brave Writer’s Director of Publishing, will walk you through the Brave Writer approach to writing and introduce you to Brave Writer products and support. 

Get to know Brave Writer. Learn how we can make a difference in your homeschool!

Sign Up Here!

A replay will be made available.

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Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy | Comments Off on Webinar: Get to Know Brave Writer

Podcast: Raising Kids Who Are Good Inside with Dr. Becky Kennedy

Brave Writer Podcast

Dr. Becky Kennedy is a clinical psychologist and the founder and CEO of Good Inside, as well as a mom of three, and she’s rethinking the way we raise our kids. Her goal: To empower parents to feel sturdier and more equipped to manage all the challenges every parent faces.

As home educators, we know that you’ve compounded the challenge of parenting by spending every waking moment (and those rare times you’re actually getting some sleep) with your precious ones.

In this Brave Writer podcast, we tackle all the topics from video games to tolerating frustration to thinking through how to deal with a child that expresses a lot of resistance and anger. Dr. Becky Kennedy brings an internal family systems perspective to the job of parenting but offers us so many practical tools. She’s never one to offer advice without breaking down exactly how to implement it in your home.

Show Notes

What does it mean to be “Good Inside”?

We all tend to incorrectly correlate behavior with identity. There are certain behaviors that are just not acceptable, like a child hitting a sibling or lying to their parents’ face—but someone can perform those “bad” behaviors without being “bad” inside. When we approach parenting—and even our own lives—with the belief that people are inherently good inside, we can approach our behavior with a sense of curiosity. Where does the gap between our identity and our behavior come from? And how does that change the way we intervene when undesirable behaviors emerge?

For one thing, it changes the way we view how an action comes to pass. In their hardest moments, children aren’t deciding to act out. Decisions require regulation, control, and forward-thinking—things that no child has in the midst of a difficult situation. As adults, we would rarely decide to yell at our kids, but sometimes it may happen, and that’s with decades of practice and development beyond what our kids have. Kids deserve our compassion when acting out, because it’s something that is beyond their control.

The importance of sturdiness

As a homeschooling parent, you have a lot of responsibility on your plate. You are directly responsible for your child’s education, such as teaching reading, writing, and math. But what do you do when your child says they hate math? That’s where this concept of sturdiness comes in.

Sturdiness is about embodying your authority as a parent. It’s a balance of boundaries and having respect for your child. By being able to create that balance, we are able to answer a vital question our kids have: “Am I safe?”

When kids see that their emotions are out of control—and those feelings are so overwhelming that they cause a parent or teacher to feel out of control—that makes them feel more afraid of those feelings. They start to believe they will never be able to control them. That’s why we set boundaries. And empathy and validation are best friends to boundaries. Because we can keep our boundaries and still let our kids feel as if we are working with them instead of against them.

Creating the right relationship to technology

Technology has changed the way that we think. It’s shortened our ability to focus—or rather, it’s made focusing on anything other than hyper-stimulating activities to be more difficult.

We are building a blueprint of expectations from life at an early age. Part of that is how much challenge we have to tolerate before seeing a reward. One thing technology has done is make it incredibly easy to get satisfaction with minimal effort. When we think about all of the difficult things we have to teach our kids, such as reading, it can take a tremendous amount of effort in order to see some results.

Nothing else is going to be a direct replacement to video games or technology to your kids. We don’t want to trick them into thinking that reading will be just as easy and stimulating as their iPad. But we do have to set boundaries, say no, tolerate their pushback when we have to make that decision, and help them move forward.

Becky wants us to remember that, above all else, parenting is hard. It is objectively too much work for one person, or even two, to take on alone. Have faith in yourself, give yourself grace, and be willing to rest and reset when needed.

Resources

  • Learn more at goodinside.com
  • Read: “Good Inside”
  • Follow Dr. Becky on Instagram: @drbeckyatgoodinside
  • Far from the Tree by Andrew Solomon: Prologue
  • Brave Writer’s Growing Brave Writers was designed with you in mind, and how to connect with a child to produce writing without pain or trauma. Learn more here: bravewriter.com/products/growing-brave-writers
  • Purchase one of our bundles or sign up for a class to be added to our Brave Learner community for free: bravewriter.com/special-offer
  • Sign up for Brave Writer’s Text Message Pod Ring: (833) 947-3684 and text the word POD
  • Want help getting started with Brave Writer? Head over to bravewriter.com/getting-started
  • Sign up for the Brave Writer newsletter to learn about all of the special offers we’re doing in 2022 and you’ll get a free seven-day Writing Blitz guide just for signing up: https://go.bravewriter.com/writing-blitz

Connect with Julie

  • Instagram: instagram.com/juliebravewriter
  • Twitter: twitter.com/bravewriter
  • Facebook: facebook.com/bravewriter
Brave Writer Podcast

Posted in Podcasts | Comments Off on Podcast: Raising Kids Who Are Good Inside with Dr. Becky Kennedy

Promote Wonder

“Frequently, by the time children reach 3rd grade, the sense of wonder with which they entered kindergarten—wonder out of which authentic thinking and thus thinking for oneself develops—has begun to diminish. By 6th grade it has practically disappeared” (459, Developing Minds, Thomas Jackson).

Traditional education models train kids to devalue their own thinking in favor of right answers and a teacher’s instructions. Little children who are used to exploring the world with their hands and wild imaginations are gradually conditioned to save those impulses for “after school” until they give them up all together before they even get to junior high.

And then we wonder why our teens appear to be inflexible, unable to grasp nuances. They’ve been conditioned by tests and homework to know that there is a right answer. They’ve lost their capacity for wonder. Teens who have retained their imaginations and their wide-eyed wonder are often seen as “not serious” about school or as “immature” or “socially inept.”

A Gift

If there were one gift I could give parents, it would be the ability to protect their children’s natural, not-jaded curiosity through the teen years. To:

  • have a teen boy who is delighted by knitting or a teen girl who wields a power saw,
  • converse with a teen who is enamored of fantasy novels to the point of writing their own and imagining that it could be published,
  • know a teen who becomes so tender to the plight of abused animals, that teen chooses to volunteer at a shelter,
  • raise a teen who plays with LEGO, who climbs trees, who secretly enjoys reruns of the PBS cartoon Arthur.

It’s one of the gifts of home education.

Let’s preserve conditions that promote wonder no matter what ages our children are.


The Enchanted Education for Teens


Still have questions? Learn more in my book, Raising Critical Thinkers.

Raising Critical Thinkers

Posted in Raising Critical Thinkers | Comments Off on Promote Wonder

Friday Freewrite: Shoe on the Other Foot

Friday Freewrite

You walk all day in the same pair of shoes. After you trudge home and kick them off, the left shoe starts a conversation with the right shoe. What do they say to each other?

New to freewriting? Check out our online guide.

Tags: Writing prompts
Posted in Friday Freewrite | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: Shoe on the Other Foot

Podcast: Avoid the Meltdown

Brave Writer Podcast

It feels like a natural part of teaching to look at our child’s work and note where it could be improved. Yet oftentimes, giving suggestions can often leave young writers feeling judged, inadequate, or underappreciated.

The good news? It’s possible to offer your young writer editorial feedback without triggering a meltdown. On today’s podcast, I’ll share some tips you can use to give your kids helpful feedback that will help retain their confidence and independence.

Show Notes

Principles and practices that may help:

  • Kids need to know that they are the authors who have the final say over their writing.
  • The positive feedback can’t be seen as “buttering up” before delivering the “real feedback” which will then be critical.
  • Remember that your feedback makes an impact even when she doesn’t take your advice.
  • Not every piece of writing needs to be improved. 
  • Finally, don’t worry if it appears that she’s resistant to feedback for a long time.

It takes time to build trust between writer and editor.

If your child senses that you consistently are on her side, that you affirm what works well, and that the feedback you offer is for her consideration, not as a command, she will come to trust you. If the feedback you give results in a wonderful change that makes the writing spring to life, she will then be likely to ask for your input the next time, rather than being suspicious of it.

Resources

  • Growing Brave Writers: store.bravewriter.com/products/growing-brave-writers
  • Find the right Brave Writer program for your kids: bravewriter.com/stages
  • Sign up for Tea with Julie emails: go.bravewriter.com/tea-with-julie
  • Sign up for Text Message Pod Ring: (833) 947-3684 and text the word POD
  • Want help getting started with Brave Writer? Head over to bravewriter.com/getting-started
  • Sign up for the Brave Writer newsletter to learn about all of the special offers we’re doing in 2022 and you’ll get a free seven-day Writing Blitz guide just for signing up: http://go.bravewriter.com/writing-blitz

Connect with Julie

  • Instagram: instagram.com/juliebravewriter
  • Twitter: twitter.com/bravewriter
  • Facebook: facebook.com/bravewriter
Brave Writer Podcast

Posted in Podcasts | Comments Off on Podcast: Avoid the Meltdown

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