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A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

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Podcast: Raising Spicy Kids! with Mary Van Geffen

Brave Writer Podcast

Mary Van Geffen is an international coaching expert for parents of “spicy ones.” She helps people who are highly competent in life but overwhelmed by the challenges of parenting to lean into the discipline of staying calm. She helps them cultivate warmth and tenderness, all while trying to wrangle the fiery future of their tiny future CEOs.

On today’s Brave Writer podcast, we discuss what it means to have or be a spicy child, and how parents can best react to these spirited young ones.

Show Notes

What is a spicy one?

Spicy can mean a number of things — besides the obvious food connotation.

It can be used to describe a child’s temperament when they express themselves in big and dramatic ways.

  • These kids aren’t afraid to take up space;
  • they’re constantly moving;
  • they hurt others unintentionally;
  • they feel things intensely;
  • they go from zero to ten instantly;
  • they’re louder than is appropriate;
  • and they have a zest for life.

They can also use powerful language that can wound or delight. They’re often very aware of other people’s feelings but can also exhibit a lack of perception of others’ feelings. They powerfully negotiate, all the way up until they lose hope and they melt down.

They’re comfortable setting boundaries with adults and staying true to themselves. They’re also highly sensitive and observant. They can’t be consoled physically. They’re also incredibly sweet, caring, and loving. In other words: They’re a lot.

Whether or not a child is spicy is determined by the parent — it’s not diagnosable. It can be impacted specifically by the relationship between parent and child and what the parent is bringing to the table. Many children whose parents say are spicy are also neurodivergent — up to 50% in a poll of Mary’s Instagram followers. And of children with some neurodivergent diagnosis, 80% of parents found the experience to be spicy. So while it doesn’t have to be a diagnosis, that really does make things spicy, doesn’t it?

What does it look like to be a good parent to a spicy child?

Prizing connection over control. It’s not about fixing the situation or motivating our kids. It can just be about connecting with them.

But what do you do when you absolutely need compliance? When what a child is doing is unsafe or you’re on a time schedule? You practice “connect before you direct.”

Spicy kids aren’t immediately won over by your words — you have to get them to buy into your vision and have their own leadership autonomy in that vision. They want to be the CEO, so rather than demoting them, let’s promote them and let their ideas have space.

Some of these kids aren’t misbehaving, they’re just in their own minds. Rather than choosing to ignore your directions, they may not have heard it at all. To get their full attention you have to give your full attention — no multitasking. Bring your body close to theirs, slow them down, and bring them along with your directions.

If there’s one overarching principle to come away with, it’s that you’re doing things right if you are focused on connection over control.

Resources

  • Mary’s website: maryvangeffen.com
  • Mary’s Instagram: @maryvangeffen
  • Sign up for our Text Message Pod Ring to get podcast updates and more!
  • 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

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Podcast: Why a Brave Writer Writing Class Works! with Kirsten Merryman

Brave Writer Podcast

Did you know that Brave Writer was the first online writing class instruction in the homeschool space? We have been pioneers and innovators in the writing space for over two decades, teaching over ten thousand students since then. 

Kirsten Merryman is the Director of Online Classes at Brave Writer. She’s responsible for hiring and training each of our 35 writing coaches to ensure that any student that registers with our program gets the same quality instruction no matter who is teaching.

Today on the Brave Writer podcast, Kirsten shares with us what makes the Brave Writer program so unique.

Show Notes

What makes writing so difficult to teach?

A parent is not going to spend money on a class unless they feel like it will help them in some way. For many homeschooling parents, writing can be one of the most difficult subjects to teach. What is it that makes it so difficult compared to other school subjects?

Part of what makes it so difficult is the complexity of it at an early age. There are the physical aspects of being able to hold a pencil and make shapes, the emotional aspect of putting thoughts onto the page, and the ability to think critically as a writer, as well as many more. With so much to address, how do you approach it all?

There’s also the baggage that parents bring into the homeschool classroom: How we were taught, how we feel about ourselves as writers, and struggling to feel qualified to teach writing to our kids.

We have good news about all of that: Our writing programs are going to take you along the same journey as your kids. No matter how skilled you feel as a writer, your kids can learn to grow as writers — and so can you!

Making sense of history

Brave Writer now features new history classes! Kids get the opportunity to evaluate historical texts and talk about historical events in our History Lab.

One thing to recognize about history is that it is always a story someone has decided to tell based on interpretations of facts. In History Lab, we peel things back and take a look at how historians make decisions about the stories they want to tell, as well as invite kids to come along and go through that experience themselves.

How we’re rethinking the essay

Most of us have been taught a traditional, five-paragraph essay structure. That structure is a tool that can be very helpful when learning how to build up an argument and support it. Unfortunately, the five-paragraph structure has been applied to practically every essay written in primary and secondary school. But at the university level, that’s not what professors are looking for.

The problem with this approach is that it severely limits our kids’ ability to make decisions. When given a set structure and being told “this is how you write an essay,” it becomes very limiting. At the college level, students are expected to make many independent decisions that they haven’t been trained to make.

Kids need to develop agency in order to do more decision-making in the writing process, and that’s what we try to do at Brave Writer. We start with writing voice, and only once that is developed do we begin to add structure. Kids can learn structure quickly, but it takes time to develop a voice and learn that you have something to say that’s worth saying.

Resources

  • Class Descriptions: https://bravewriter.com/online-classes
  • How our classes work: https://bravewriter.com/program/online-classes/about-online-classes
  • Winter/Spring Class Schedule: https://bravewriter.com/program/online-classes/class-schedule
  • Sign up for our Text Messages for special offers and homeschool tips: https://store.bravewriter.com/pages/BRAVE-subscribe-page
  • 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

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Mechanics & Literature: December 2022

Brave Writer

December’s Dart, Arrow, and Boomerang selections celebrate the power of family and friendship and provide shiny opportunities to explore in dynamic new ways:

  • writing,
  • mechanics,
  • and literary devices. 

And this month’s Quill takes you on an exciting ride exploring modes of transportation, while also nurturing your child’s early reading, writing, and math skills.


[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!]


Brave Writer Quill
Quill (ages 5-7)

Cars! Boats! Trains! Oh, my! Get ready to move with the December Quill: Transportation!

In this Quill we’ll size up books as we explore book anatomy; label pieces and parts; get a move on to memorize as we develop gross motor skills; train fine motor skills with tracing; keep track with counting; and see how one thing is not like another as we compare and contrast.

NOTE: You can use any transportation picture books you have in your stacks or find at your library.

Some suggestions:

  • Choo Choo: The Story of a Little Engine Who Ran Away by Virginia Lee Burton
  • My First Day by Phùng Nguyên Quang & Huỳnh Kim Liên 
  • Room for Everyone by Naaz Khan, illustrated by Mercè López
  • DK Smithsonian Our World in Pictures: Cars, Trains, Ships & Planes by Clive Gifford
  • Stephen Biesty’s Incredible Cross-Sections by Stephen Biesty 
  • The Amazing History of Transportation: Machines in Motion by Tom Jackson

Get the Quill.


Brave Writer Dart
Dart (ages 8-10)

The Very, Very Far North by Dan Bar-el

Meet Duane, a lovable polar bear who finds friends and adventure wherever he goes!

Our story’s narrator this month has big opinions and can’t wait to share them with you! What a perfect way to demonstrate the role of the intrusive narrator, this month’s literary device!

We’ll also: 

  • wiggle our way through a look at verbs describing the ways animals move;
  • encounter a passage that uses repetition again, and again, and again (to great effect);
  • savor some lyrical language;
  • ponder the delights of personification;
  • split up parts of a sentence and make lists with semicolons; 
  • consider a cornucopia of color names, and so much more!

Purchase the book.

Get the Dart.


Brave Writer Arrow
Arrow (ages 11-12)

A Place to Hang the Moon by Kate Albus

This heartwarming story of three siblings evacuated from London to live in the countryside during World War II is a feel-good story—a perfect family read aloud.

December’s literary device is genre. Find out what makes historical fiction unique and explore which genres your family especially enjoys!

We’ll also: 

  • capture conjunctions and cling or string ideas together;
  • show respect with honorifics;
  • search for short sentences and some long ones too;
  • slide suffixes in at the end;
  • discuss the ins and outs of dialogue;
  • catch commas carrying out all sorts of jobs; and so much more!  

Purchase the book.

Get the Arrow.


Brave Writer Boomerang
Boomerang (ages 13-14)

The Silence Between Us by Alison Gervais

This look at a teen girl navigating Deaf culture, high school, and relationship struggles is sure to spark Big Juicy Conversation in your home.

In this Boomerang, we’ll:

  • contemplate how conflict is constructed;
  • provide background details about narrative exposition;
  • get acquainted with character development;
  • wait and wait to find out about suspense;
  • chat about colloquial expressions with y’all; 
  • enjoy an aha moment with an exhilarating epiphany and so much more! 

Purchase the book.

Get the Boomerang.


For ages 15-18, check out the Slingshot.


Brave Writer

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Podcast: Happy Homeschooling through the Holidays

Brave Writer Podcast

During the holidays, many homeschooling parents know that there are going to be disruptions to the routine of daily life.

Some homeschoolers don’t even bother with finding a balance and they take the month off from education, instead dedicating that time to cookies, music, and family.

Others try their best to keep up their homeschool routine, even if that means refusing to participate in holiday activities.

I’d like to offer a third way, a potentially better solution that will allow you to have your peppermint cookies and eat them, too.

You can also listen on Apple Podcasts.

Show Notes

Finding your best balance

What are the expectations around the holidays, and how can we reframe the month to balance feeling satisfied with our homeschooling performance without losing out on the joy of the season?

This depends on your answer to this question: How important are the holidays to you?

Not everybody celebrates Christmas, especially to the extent that our culture expects. You may feel pressured to fill this month with activities that ultimately don’t mean that much to you.

If it is meaningful to you, it may be worth considering how much time you need to celebrate. It could be that condensing your holiday celebrations into the last two weeks of the year is a happy medium that allows you to get in more of your typical homeschool routine.

Marrying education and celebration

The holidays give us a million and one ways to cover all educational subjects.

December is a natural time to watch movies and read books, so lean into that. Pick read-alouds that have corresponding movies, and even — dare I say — allow your kids to watch the movies first. This can help invite interest in a book if you’re struggling to get that going.

Crafts, gift wrapping, shopping for gifts, budgeting, and making lists are all helpful, educational activities. If you’re going to teach your kids to use Excel, imagine how much easier it would be when organizing a spreadsheet of the gifts they want for Christmas or how they’re going to allocate their spending on gifts.

You can also use the subject of holidays to study various holiday traditions around the world. Spin a globe, point at a place, and use Google to find out what holiday they might celebrate.

  • When does it occur?
  • What traditions go along with it?
  • What is the history behind it?

Another educational opportunity that relates to the holiday is having kids interview grandparents about their favorite childhood memories around this season.

  • Is there a recipe within the family you could make?
  • A custom you can adopt?
  • Or just a funny story you’ve never heard before?

Giving kids the opportunity to interview grandparents grows their interviewing skills, write down answers in a book of memories, or collect old traditions and create new ones.

These are ways we can make the holidays less about missing out on one aspect or the other and more of a “yes, and” situation.

Resources

  • Sign up for our Text Message Pod Ring to get our Cyber Monday Discount Code!
  • Our online class program for 2023 opens Monday, December 5th at 12:00 PM Eastern. For 12 hours only, we are putting some of our most popular classes on sale! Visit bravewriter.com/online-classes to learn more.
  • 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

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Cyber Monday Sale 2022

Brave Writer

Cyber Monday is happening NOW!

Your 28% off Discount Code is:

MOREJOY

Take 28% off of any purchase in the Brave Writer store (except Literature Singles and classes). 

That means:

  • 28% off any bundle (kids 5-18!)
  • 28% off Growing Brave Writers
  • 28% off Help for High School
  • 28% off Jot It Down! or Partnership Writing or Building Confidence
  • 28% off Quill (5-7), Dart (8-10), Arrow (11-12), Boomerang (13-14), and Slingshot (15-18) year long programs!

Enter the code at checkout in the discount code space provided.

Sale ends at midnight eastern on Monday, November 28.

Happy shopping!

Please tell your Brave Writer-curious friends! This is the only sale of its kind this year.

Brave Writer

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