Brave Writer Philosophy Archives - Page 23 of 84 - 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 the ‘Brave Writer Philosophy’ Category

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“I couldn’t be happier with the path you’ve shown me.”

Brave Writer

From Brave Writer mom, Wendy:

Julie,

I travel for my work as a journalist, and for years have dragged my “students” around the country with me, homeschooling in hotel rooms, newsrooms, airports…and always feeling like we aren’t doing enough.  I have never written on homeschool blogs and such, but I just have to write to you to say how much your advice has meant to me.

I’m a long time homeschooler who struggled with my son in writing for the entire 10 years I homeschooled him.  Then he went to the public school for the last two years in high school, and even though he had barely written anything that I’d tried to force him to write, the teachers loved his writing.  Just like you say, he quickly improved his mechanics.  The English teacher told me his writing stood out from all the other students because he had something to say.  They told me his writing was “fresh” and “deep”, unlike the usual writing they got from their students.  Talk about waiting to exhale.  I let out a huge EXHALE.

Now, I have another young child coming up, a storytelling daughter. And I’m so glad I’ve now found you.  After seeing how my son was using the Brave Writer method on ME all those years (by forcing me to leave him alone and just read and tell stories instead of writing a lot of essays and book reports), I’m now enthusiastically following your ideas with my little girl. We started with freewriting and now she is writing a few paragraphs every day in the world’s longest ongoing tale.  She is in 3rd grade so I do nothing more than ask questions about the characters, show enthusiasm to hear the next adventure, and ask her to read it to me over and over again.  We love your book suggestions, copy work, and your writing projects.  She loved the map thing with Nim’s Island and now makes maps (and list of creatures that should live in that place) for just about every story we read.

And the best sign of progress on my part?  She spent a week being watched by another homeschool family and the teenage boy in the family went into her story and put editing marks all over it, trying to help her fix the spelling and punctuation.  My heart was broken!  He thought he was helping but I told her, “I’m so sorry he wrote all over your story.  I loved it just the way it was.”  To think that it used to be ME writing all over my son’s stories. He has left home now so I called him to apologize. And the boy who wouldn’t write?  Well, he hasn’t even gone to college yet and at 18 years old he is already working in a television newsroom and even writing news copy–self taught.  And to think of all the book reports I never did get out of him. (Although now that he chose journalism, I’m homeschooling him in an entirely new way… via Skype.  He sends me his news scripts and now I’m being more Brave Writer-like when I give him professional feedback.)

You have changed our lives.  My daughter and I talk about you like you live in our house.  Julie says this…Julie had this idea…on and on.  THANK YOU!  Other newer homeschool moms ask me for advice about writing “curriculums” and I try to talk them out of it.  I tell them about Brave Writer.  They rarely listen because they really want a curriculum, worksheets, book reports, lots of assignments. They just aren’t ready to hear it yet. But I couldn’t be happier with the path you’ve shown me.  I know what you suggest is spot on because of what “accidentally” happened with my son all those years ago.  Now, I’m so happy that Sophie and I are on this journey with you.  Welcome to the family.

Wendy


Brave Learner Home

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, Email | 2 Comments »

Invest: Part Two

Eating

A Tale of Two Pregnancies

My first baby was born in Morocco. I chose to use a pair of midwives (one British, one Dutch) and to give birth in a city 90 minutes from my home, in my midwife’s apartment. As a 24 year old, I knew nothing of pregnancy or birthing, and lived in a country without access to English book stores. No Internet back then either.

I relied on friends from the states to send me books. I read them with the kind of dedication common to newly pregnant women—but with even more commitment because I knew that it was utterly up to me to ensure that I gave myself the absolute best chance for a safe, healthy birth since I was in a foreign country and had to make a long journey in labor to give birth in a home without a doctor present.

I began by reading about various kinds of births and discovered that I wanted to follow a specific method. Once I committed to it, I carried out the practices and diet with religious fervor. I became incredibly healthy: I slept well, I ate the right foods (including chicken livers), took the right vitamins, slugged down liquid beef iron from glass tubes, walked four miles a day, napped, stretched my hips, and did all the breathing exercises. I was ready.

My labor lasted 24 hours and came five days early, but the birth was completely unmedicated and I had no episiotomy.

Success.

The next pregnancy came when I now had the most active toddler imaginable. I lived in the states at the time and assumed having gone through a pregnancy and birth, I knew what to do. Except I didn’t do what I knew to do. I didn’t read, I didn’t ensure that I was sleeping enough (hard with a nursing wakeful toddler), I didn’t walk miles a day, I didn’t do my stretching or breathing exercises, I didn’t take iron or vitamins.

At the beginning of my 7th month, I had gained only eleven pounds. By the end of the month, I had lost 3 pounds—a net 8 pounds. I developed acute bronchitis and my baby’s life was in danger.

I had to be put to bed, and went on a strict weight-gaining diet (which is not as fun as you think it would be!). I had to sleep and eat right. I suddenly had time (as I was required to stay in bed) to read. As I reread the books from before and new ones now available to me, I discovered that I had forgotten so many things! It was not possible to just be pregnant when the demands on my life had gone up! I had to be extra careful.

Luckily with the help of my husband, mother, and friends, we reversed the weight loss trend, and Johannah was a 9.3 lb baby at full term. I had gained a whopping 23 lbs. by the end.

My point is this. As we increase the challenge of homeschool by adding children or going up grade levels, it’s tempting to stop feeding yourself—to stop learning about home education or to assume you know what to do (old hat) and so you move forward without new inspiration or reminders of what is essential.

With the increased demands, you may find yourself winded, resentful, overwhelmed, or scattered. You wonder how to get back to the full-bodied homeschool of the previous years, when your kids were young.

Don’t take your homeschooling knowledge for granted. It’s too easy for your homeschool to become anemic or under-nourished.

Feed yourself.

Get rest.

Renew your commitment.

Awaken your own curiosity.

Try new ideas for variety.

Be present to your children and to their learning…all the way through. Slow down. Get help and support. Find time away to do the research you need to do to become energized again.

Taking breaks is good and necessary. Don’t slide into “coasting” where you forget why you are doing what you are doing, and assuming that you know all you ever need to know. There’s always more to know and that knowledge will help you!

READ Invest: Part One here.

Shared on facebook.

Image by Britt Selvitelle (cc)

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, Homeschool Advice | 1 Comment »

Invest: Part One

Invest in your homeschool

We’re all busy. We want short cuts, easy explanations, to do lists, and obvious, fast results.

Homeschooling doesn’t work that way.

It’s an investment—it takes time. Lots of time. Time you don’t have.

When you decide to homeschool, you’re choosing a degree program for yourself. You’re choosing to become an autodidact (self-taught student) of learning—how it happens, under what conditions, using what tools, for which sorts of kids, in what subject areas.

To get a quality understanding of the nature of learning requires reading.

A lot of reading.

It is on task to read email lists, homeschool bulletin boards, blogs, websites, curriculum books, the teacher’s notes for any program you select, books about learning, homeschooling books about the philosophy of education, Charlotte Mason’s education series, educators who have left the system to create new models of learning (Maria Montessori, John Holt), and more.

You have to do it. Most of us want to. Some of us worry that it will take too much time.

You can’t think that way.

If you get impatient—”I don’t want to understand the reasoning behind this program, I just want to know what to do”—you will, eventually, be frustrated by that program.

There is no “do this” and “it gets done” program. Each one requires knowing how to use it and what to do when there are blocks to progress.

Trained teachers spend years earning degrees to understand how to bring about the “aha” that is learning in a classroom.

School has its own properties that require specific skill sets to create learning.

Home has other properties! These need to be studied, tried, lived, revised, tested, and measured against new information as you get it. It is worth it (absolutely) to read the intent behind the philosophy before applying the practices.

If you are so busy that you don’t have time to invest in training yourself to be a home educator, you must consider whether this is what you want to do with your life. Your kids deserve a parent at home who is well equipped to make learning an adventure that leads to joy and competence. They should not be subjected to drudgery. Schools at least provide activities, field trips, friends, and variety.

We all need help. There’s no shame in signing up for a co-op or tutoring, taking online classes or swapping with a friend – she teaches your kids math and you teach her kids writing.

You make decisions to involve others based on your philosophy of education, not because you don’t want to do the work yourself. Even if you use a co-op, your involvement at home is critical. Parents of kids in school help their kids with homework every day. There are no shortcuts.

When you triangle-in help, involve passionate, competent people in the education of your children. I would rather have my kids learn how to shoot photos by my friend’s husband who is a professional photographer than to teach them myself. I would rather swap math and language arts with my other friend since she’s a whiz at calculus and conveys passion about math while I provide a similar experience with writing.

But in no case is it advisable to simply hand a child a book and ask that child to work through it—without you exerting some kind of effort to set up the lesson or to structure a context that makes that work meaningful.

I hear all too often that certain curricula (sometimes mine!) are too dense with philosophy or explanation about why and how processes of learning work. The parents are busy. They want to get to the practices.

But does that work, really? What do you do when you barge ahead and the child winds up reluctant, resistant, or in tears? What do you do when the boredom of the daily practice turns into “cheating” (looking up answers in the back) to get done? What happens when you get to a process in the text that you don’t “get” that had perhaps been explained in the opening?

There’s absolutely no shortcut to homeschooling. It’s an incredible undertaking of love and commitment—whether you unschool or use textbooks. In both cases, a sturdy, ongoing, investigation of how to problem solve and foster a love of learning will be your primary work for 15+ years.

It’s great work! I loved it. Most parents who stick with homeschooling do.

But remember: when you are tempted to take a short cut, you may be circumventing the most important part of teaching—understanding why and how to create the right conditions for learning to catch fire.

Invest. The dividends are rich.

READ Invest: Part Two here.

Image by popofatticus

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, Homeschool Advice | 4 Comments »

When the Tears Come

When the tears come, the writing is done

Who can do anything well while crying?

Can you type while crying? Cook dinner? Play board games? Not well.

Tears are an indication that something is wrong. Really wrong. They signal pain: emotional or physical. In writing, emotional pain may be writer’s block or fear of making a mistake. Physical pain may be that the hand hurts from squeezing the pencil too tightly, or eye strain, or physical exhaustion from a poor night’s sleep.

Crying is not a sign of laziness or lack of character. Crying is the last release, the final “giving up” and admission of failure.

Crying signals: I need comfort.

When the tears come, the writing’s done.

Take a break.

Acknowledge your child’s feelings. “I see that you’re unhappy. Let’s talk about this project later.”

Offer a hug.

When the Tears Come the Writing is Done

Later, when your child has regained equilibrium, come back to find out what went wrong.

Ask:

  • Are you afraid of making a mistake?
  • Is it too hard to grip the pencil for ten minutes straight?
  • Are you having a hard time spelling?
  • Do you wish you could play outside in the sunshine rather than sit at a table?
  • Does it feel like you have nothing to say?
  • Are you sleepy? Hungry?
  • Do you feel pressured by me?

Be an investigator and a comforter. A cup of tea and eye contact will go a long way toward soothing the hurting writer. Remember, writer’s block is the usual reason for writing paralysis (not strong wills).

Writer’s block means the child doesn’t have access to the words inside. The words are hidden behind anxiety, fear of failure, or a vague sense of the topic (not enough depth in the subject area to be able to write about it meaningfully).

Writer’s block is experienced by everyone (pros, professors, and prodigies) and at its most acute, produces tears.

Give oodles of empathy and hugs. Offer a snack (with protein in it). Talk about how to make writing less painful. Take some time to remind yourself of the goal – a free, brave writer who is at ease when writing, not gripped with anxiety and fear.

Take a look at Growing Brave Writers, if you need strategies for unblocking your chronically blocked writers.

Growing Brave Writers

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, Homeschool Advice, Writing about Writing | 1 Comment »

It’s the Relationship, Sweetheart

Brave Writer

When you’re tempted to get worked up about algebra,

breathe.

Remind yourself: My daughter and I can tackle algebra more easily if we like each other.

When he spills the Cheerios right after you told him to wait for you,

hold back.

Let the lava flow of irritation run through you, but don’t spill it onto his little head. Remember: He won’t always spill Cheerios, but he will be grateful that I’m not the type to lose my cool.

When you can’t squeeze another chapter into the end of the year, and you’re disappointed in yourself for not being more disciplined,

let go.

Notice: My children like me. I like them. I can let that be enough, because it is.

When heartbreak threatens to steal your memories, when you don’t know how to get to the next space because it’s unfamiliar and riddled with loss, hold on. Tell yourself: It will be okay because I love and am loved. I’ll get to the other side by loving, not by fearing.

When one of your children doesn’t like you right now,

trust.

This too shall pass: My love and like are big enough for the both of us. I can let my natural devotion and affection lead me, not my resentment, nor my anxiety, nor my anger.

When you imagine your children in the future, what do you see? Inside jokes, vacations at the beach, memories of outings taken and books read, big hugging reunions, foods to share, games to play?

Pay attention:

These start now. I can do them now. I will value them now.

In the end, the book learning will come (sometimes quickly and ahead of schedule, sometimes in college, sometimes not until one your children decides to home educate his or her offspring).

What can never be scheduled or studied, crammed or tested is love.

Homeschooling is a performance of love between family members over a sustained, daily, intimate period of years, led by a parent who puts relationship ahead of books.

Check in with yourself today.

Be present to your children.

Love one another.


Brave Learner Home

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, Homeschool Advice | 5 Comments »

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