
Did you know that the word “run” has hundreds of different meanings? For example: run a race, run a company, run water.
Write a story using “run” in as many ways as you can!
New to freewriting? Check out our online guide.
Did you know that the word “run” has hundreds of different meanings? For example: run a race, run a company, run water.
Write a story using “run” in as many ways as you can!
New to freewriting? Check out our online guide.
Tags: Writing prompts
Posted in Friday Freewrite | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: Run
What do the laundry cycle and the learning cycle have in common? A lot, actually. Today, we apply KC Davis’s take on laundry to homeschooling.
In her book How to Keep House While Drowning, KC Davis talks about how the goal of the laundry cycle shouldn’t be to have all your family’s clothes clean at once. The goal is for everyone to have clean clothes to wear that day. The goal is to keep the cycle moving.
We think the same concept applies to homeschooling. The goal of educating your child shouldn’t be linear mastery. The goal is for your child to be able to, at any moment, tap into:
The goal is to keep the learning cycle going.
Lots of “aha!” moments in this Brave Writer podcast episode– join us as we process it all.
Learning as a Cycle, Not a Linear Process
Here at Brave Writer we have a core concept called Spin and Spiral. Everything in Brave Writer is designed to let kids loop back through a concept, experience it on a deeper level, or experience it again as if for the first time – wherever the spiral meets them. As a kid is reexposed to a concept over time, they reinforce and grow their level of mastery, nuance, and connection to it.
Letting Go of Perfection
A lot of times we fall into the trap of thinking that everything in our home needs to be neat and tidy before we start our projects. We need to let that kind of thinking go. As Anne Lamott says, mess is a sign of vitality. Having your projects out can help you remember to keep working on them. Having toys out, especially in places where they usually aren’t, helps kids interact with them in new, interesting ways.
We have to let go of perfection when it comes to our kids’ learning too. Remember, getting things wrong is a critical part of learning. Revising, editing, and catching mistakes with fresh eyes– those are important skills they’ll use for the rest of their lives. If you make catching errors more like a detective game than a practice in shame, you will help create a resilient, eager learner.
Guess what, you are going to make mistakes as a teacher too. Rather than getting frustrated with yourself or your struggling kid:
Stress and pressure usually make both learning and performance much more difficult.
Creating Space for Curiosity
So much of deep learning is associations, meanings, and connections that don’t occur with explicit teaching. Again, it’s the concept of Spin and Spiral. By organically coming across a concept or experience again and again, kids (and adults) can process it deeper or differently based on where they are at now versus when they encountered it before.
You can also create space for curiosity when you are explicitly teaching. For example, if your kid is struggling with math, we suggest letting them flip through their math textbook and find a lesson that looks interesting to them. Any lesson. We’re trying to catalyze interest. Once they see a page that looks like something they might be interested in, you can ask them:
“Try to solve this page Try to solve these ideas. How would you approach these problems?”
If they’re missing information because it’s before that page, suddenly all those pages just became meaningful and worth exploring and possibly understanding.
Connections are key to curiosity. When we don’t have a grasp or a relationship for why we’re learning what we’re learning, it’s just a stressful performance for perfectionism.
Here’s to the mess, the mistakes, and the connections made because of them!
Produced by NOVA Media
Posted in Podcasts | Comments Off on [Podcast #207] Cycles in Learning and Housekeeping
What brightens your day?
A rainbow after a storm.
An unexpected compliment from a stranger.
A text from a homeschool company.
Wait! What?!
Yes! Texts from Brave Writer aren’t all business!
Sure, we share about sales—but that’s not all!
Here are a few examples!
(International: add a 1)
Looking forward to connecting with you!
Posted in Homeschool Advice | Comments Off on Connect with Us: Text Support from Brave Writer!
The second Brave Writer precept is: We are a family of learners—parents and children—making progress each at our own pace.
Our kids each learn at their own pace, in their own ways. Home accommodates their unique needs so easily, when we lean into it.
What many parents discover is what I call the “secret agenda” of homeschooling. As you teach your children, you discover the holes in your own education!
The family, then, becomes a learning community. We may start for our kids, but many times we continue because we fall in love with learning all over again (or maybe even for the first time!).
To begin a homeschool journey is simple:
Then with your kids (sprinkle these throughout the month):
This is all you need to do during the first month.
That’s it.
You can use the rest of the time you are free to do some research for curricula that satisfies some of the objectives you determine for your kids.
You don’t have to spin all the plates on day one! In fact, please don’t! Enjoy your children and follow the rabbit trails that interest you.
If you are pondering whether or not to take the leap, it’s helpful to remember: you can always undo your choice.
Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy | Comments Off on Brave Writer Precept #2: Kids Learn at Their Own Pace
Friday doesn’t want to be thought of as unlucky on the 13th anymore, so it asks friends Thursday and Saturday for advice. Write their conversation.
New to freewriting? Check out our online guide.
Tags: Writing prompts
Posted in Friday Freewrite | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: Day-to-Day Advice
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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