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A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

Thoughts from my home to yours

Archive for the ‘BW products’ Category

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What’s Your Summer Strategy?

Brave Writer Summer Classes

Look into the distance… Do you see it? Sun, sand, and… “I’m bored!”

That’s right. Summer is on the horizon!  

Poll: What’s your summer strategy?

  1. Keep it chill and keep ‘em busy
  2. Try something new
  3. Maintain our progress
  4. Mama needs to rest
  5. Prep for September

Ready to lock in your answer? 

Now let me show you how to use our summer roster of online classes to make your selection work. 


Your Results

If you selected…

Keep it chill and  keep ‘em busy

Our summer classes last a short enough time frame that you can commit and then take a nice break when it’s over. These classes are 3-4 week bursts: 

  • Write for Fun: Go Wild or Fly High (ages 9-14)
  • Worldbuilding (ages 9-14)
  • Passion for Fiction (ages 11-18)

Try something new!

It’s the perfect time to see how you like our approach. Start with classes with a new spin on old topics: 

  • Groovy Grammar (family class; ages 9-14 + parent)
  • Nature Journaling (family class; ages 9-18 + parent)
  • Fan Fiction (ages 13-18)

Maintain our progress

No one wants to start from scratch in September! These classes bridge the gap by letting students practice the writing process from start to finish.

  • Middle School Writing: Passion Projects (ages 9-14)
  • Elementary Writing: Animal Stories (family class; ages 7-10 + parent)
  • Essay Writing 102: The Persuasive Essay (ages 13-18)

Mama needs to rest

I hear that! Have a deep dive into a favorite subject pre-planned and executed for you. Our instructors give kind, productive, thorough feedback to your kids! Available at all times for questions. 

  • Middle School Writing: Nonfiction Projects (ages 9-14)
  • Comic Strip Capers (ages 9-14 and older comics lovers)
  • Movie Discussion Club (ages 9-18)

Prep for September

Certain thinking and writing skills need to be cultivated through exploratory exercises before we can expect students to take big leaps. Let us set your student up for success. 

  • College Admissions Essay (ages 15-18)
  • Essay Prep: Dynamic Thinking (ages 13-18)
  • Elementary Writing: Story Switcheroo (family class; ages 5-8 + parent)

Another way you can prepare for next year? By taking advantage of our summer sale! Read on for more details.


Complete Summer Class Schedule

Want to see our classes up close? Check out our sample classroom. 


Brave Writer Online Classes

Posted in BW products, Online Classes | Comments Off on What’s Your Summer Strategy?

Mechanics & Literature: April 2023

Brave Writer

April’s Dart, Arrow, and Boomerang selections spotlight dynamic characters navigating complex situations and feelings. Your family will be entertained and inspired as they explore:

  • writing,
  • mechanics,
  • and literary devices.

And this month’s Quill is all about bugs! Your kids can skitter, hop, and fly into nature studies, exploring life cycles and habitats as they practice 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)

Buggy Bugs

Are you ready for a new Quill to buzz its way to you? The April Quill (Bugs) is here! (And if you are wondering, we are using the term “bug” in a broad sense to include any tiny creepy-crawlies.)

In this Quill we’ll discover the fun facts tucked into author and illustrator bios; flutter, flap, and sting our way through a look at an array of action words; stare into the face of danger in an exploration of the warning signs used by bugs—and people; survey family members to find out which insect is best beloved and which is most loathed; delight in the symmetry of insect marketing as we build a butterfly; and spot shapes in buggy bodies as we build even more bugs!

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

Some suggestions:

  • Inch and Roly by Melissa Wiley 
  • Insect Detective by Steve Voake
  • The Big Book of Bugs by Yuval Zommer 
  • Bugs by the Numbers by Sharon Werner & Sarah Forss
  • Who Would Win? Ultimate Bug Rumble by Jerry Pallotta
  • Origami Insects by Anna George 

Get the Quill.


Brave Writer Dart
Dart (ages 8-10)

Maybe Maybe Marisol Rainey by Erin Entrada Kelly 

Your family will have fun getting to know eight-year-old Marisol and watching her overcome her fears. Warm humor and a dash of adventure make this story a special delight.

A story’s details are easier to digest in bite-sized bits, AKA chapters! And that’s what we’re looking at in this month’s literary device section.  

We’ll also: 

  • investigate italics,
  • ponder personification,
  • consider commas,
  • discover dashes,
  • holler about hyperbole,
  • observe onomatopoeia that makes our hearts go pitty-pat, and so much more! 

Purchase the book.

Get the Dart.


Brave Writer Arrow
Arrow (ages 11-12)

Once Upon an Eid: Stories of Hope and Joy edited by S. K. Ali and Aisha Saeed

Celebrate Eid traditions, the sharing of festive meals, and the giving of gifts in this joy-filled short-story anthology.

April’s literary device is the narrative arc. We’ll explore the ways this important device gives a story a spine—its beginning, middle, and end!  

We’ll also: 

  • get moving with action verbs,
  • mess around with mood,
  • investigate internal monologue,
  • change the tone with end marks,
  • consider complex characters,
  • explore what makes graphic novel storytelling tick,
  • keep the story flowing with em dashes, and so much more.

Purchase the book.

Get the Arrow.


Brave Writer Boomerang
Boomerang (ages 13-14)

The Fountains of Silence by Ruta Sepetys

This powerful piece of historical fiction takes readers to Madrid in 1957, which is under the fascist dictatorship of General Francisco Franco. This novel is a page-turner sure to inspire lively conversation in your family!

In this Boomerang, we’ll:

  • whisper secrets and scrawl furtive letters,
  • dress up dialogue with action,
  • analyze allusions,
  • examine the evidence with primary and secondary sources,
  • revolve around repeated imagery with extended metaphor and simile,
  • forecast the future with foreshadowing,
  • probe the past and ponder shifting perspectives and point of view, and so much more!

Purchase the book.

Get the Boomerang.


For ages 15-18, check out the Slingshot.


Brave Writer

Posted in Arrow, Boomerang, BW products, Language Arts | Comments Off on Mechanics & Literature: April 2023

Mechanics & Literature: March 2023

Brave Writer

March’s Dart, Arrow, and Boomerang selections show characters who let curiosity and the desire to know the truth propel them toward powerful new discoveries. Your family will be entertained and enlightened as they explore

  • writing,
  • mechanics,
  • and literary devices with these stories.

This month’s Quill rocks! Use it to make memories that sparkle like gems! Explore rocks, stones, and minerals as your child practices 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)

Rocks Rock

Are you ready for an earth-shattering time exploring one of nature’s oldest toys? The March Quill (Rocks) is ready for you!

In this Quill we’ll have a fine old time with timelines; curate a gneiss collection of vocabulary words; set our senses sizzling with an exploration of imagery; engage our fine motor skills with the oldest writing materials on the planet; sharpen our sorting skills; and weigh in on a unique standard of measurement.

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

Some suggestions:

  • A Stone for Sascha by Aaron Becker 
  • Bok’s Giant Leap by Neil Armstrong, illustrated by Grahame Baker Smith
  • The Stone Hatchlings by Sarah Tsiang, illustrated by Qin Leng
  • If Rocks Could Sing: a discovered alphabet by Leslie McGuirk 
  • What Can You Do With a Rock? by Pat Zietlow Miller, illustrated by Katie Kath
  • A Field Guide to Rocks and Minerals (Peterson Field Guides) by Frederick Pough

Get the Quill.


Brave Writer Dart
Dart (ages 8-10)

Egg Marks the Spot by Amy Timberlake

Your entire family can join Skunk and Badger on a rock-finding expedition! Surprises lurk behind every boulder!

Have you ever started reading a book about mazes and gotten lost in it? Oof, sorry, we couldn’t resist! That’s because this month’s literary device is puns. Author Amy Timberlake has loaded her story with puns that will make you giggle and groan! Explore how this wacky wordplay works.

We’ll also: 

  • explore, investigate, and scrutinize some synonyms,
  • keep an ear out for onomatopoeia,
  • consider commas and colons in dialogue,
  • embark on a Skills Tracker Scavenger Hunt,
  • zig and zag through an exploration of verbs,
  • give a list a nice big hug with parentheses, and so much more! 

Purchase the book.

Get the Dart.


Brave Writer Arrow
Arrow (ages 11-12)

A Kind of Spark by Elle McNicoll

Award-winning, neurodivergent author Elle McNicoll has written a story of the historical European witch trials and of a contemporary neurodivergent protagonist who is intent on setting the story straight. We’re confident this book will give your family lots to talk about!

March’s literary devices are alliteration, consonance, and assonance. We’ll explore the ways these devices make writing flow and provide a dash of pizazz!  

 We’ll also: 

  • ponder how pronouns help you and me,
  • advance our understanding of adjectives,
  • activate our imaginations with action words—verbs,
  • tune into interior monologue,
  • capture clauses with commas,
  • play with plural nouns, and so much more!

Purchase the book.

Get the Arrow.


Brave Writer Boomerang
Boomerang (13-14)

Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne

Put on your seatbelts and settle in for a wild ride! This month you’ll join Professor Lidenbrock, an adventurous geology professor, as he sets out on a journey to the center of the earth!

In this Boomerang, we’ll:

  • get acquainted through characterization,
  • turn over translation ups and downs,
  • ponder punctuation fashions over time, 
  • embark on an epic journey through a subterranean fantasyscape,
  • inquire about science and research,
  • wrestle with a resolution and so much more!

Purchase the book.

Get the Boomerang.


For ages 15-18, check out the Slingshot.


Brave Writer

Posted in Arrow, Boomerang, BW products, Language Arts | Comments Off on Mechanics & Literature: March 2023

Something Worth Saying

Brave Writer

Bogart Kids

I have a million photos of my kids. My 5 are forever hoisting one big kid sideways in celebration of a life event.

I love them, even when the faces are blurry.

I have one well-posed photo that we all hate. Before we took the “family portrait,” half of us were in tears. No one would stand still, there was an argument about whether or not to keep the top button buttoned on a shirt, and we had to stand in line WHILE behaving (as if behaving and line-standing at once are possible in this time-space continuum). The photo shows smiling faces. The family is arranged just so. And it’s lifeless.

Sure, I’ve got some well-staged photos of my kids that show all their teeth, each person looking at the camera and no one seething that they had to button the top button, too. As they’ve gotten older, though, even those photos have changed. They wear clothes that express their personalities, they stand in the order they prefer, they laugh or pose or act all serious.

And now: the Grand Analogy to Writing you were waiting for.

Would you still rather believe that stiff, lifeless prose that matches a format, achieved through tears, tantrums, and trauma will result in better writing than tapping into your child’s quirky, insightful, natural personality?

Can you imagine what would happen if you believed your child had something worth saying and that your only job is to capture it like a candid photograph—a snapshot of their inner life, at this moment in time?

Did you realize that the writing your child does (from their tender heart or their silly sense of humor or their fact-packed mind) IS the snapshot of their person that will preserve who they are for you even better than silly photographs and family portraits?

Nab it! Jot it down! The forms for writing come easiest when a child has full access to their ideas, beliefs, and words. Brave Writer has tools that help you teach the forms while maximizing your child’s originality! These forms match a child’s stage of growth (we don’t expect 3rd graders to write essays—PLEASE).


New to us? Start here!


Brave Learner Home

Posted in BW products, Julie's Life | Comments Off on Something Worth Saying

Mechanics & Literature: February 2023

Brave Writer

February’s Dart, Arrow, and Boomerang selections feature strong characters who are finding their way in the world even as it changes all around them.

These stories will sow the seeds for Big Juicy Conversations your kids won’t soon forget as your family explores:

  • writing,
  • mechanics,
  • and literary devices,

And this month’s Quill contains the flavorful ingredients you’ll need to explore cooking with kids!

Discover new foods and the places they come from while your children practice early reading, handwriting, 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)

Break out the measuring cups! The February Quill (Cooking) is here!

In this Quill we’ll keenly observe the spices of life; cook up comparisons with kitchen language; put nursery rhymes into action; bake in order with sequencing; and compare measurement systems.

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

Some suggestions:

  • A Fine Dessert by Emily Jenkins, illustrated by Sophie Blackall 
  • Arab Fairy Tale Feasts: A Literary Cookbook by Karim Alrawi, illustrated by Nahid Kazemi 
  • Awesome Kitchen Science Experiments for Kids: 50 STEAM Projects You Can Eat! by Megan Olivia Hall
  • Stone Soup by Jon J. Muth
  • Strega Nona and other books about cooking by Tomie dePaola 
  • Tomatoes for Neela by Padma Lakshmi, illustrated by Juana Martinez-Neal

Get the Quill.


Brave Writer Dart
Dart (ages 8-10)

Maya and the Robot by Eve L. Ewing

Things get interesting when Maya meets Ralph, a forgotten homemade robot who comes to life!

You won’t want to miss our story’s opening scene—it’s a food fight, oh my! And this story ends right where it started! You’ll have to read the book to see what we mean, but trust us, it’s the perfect example of this month’s literary device, hook and return! 

We’ll also: 

  • shout about interjections and exclamation points!
  • take a peek behind the curtain at prepositions,
  • dive into some deliciously detailed descriptive language,
  • look at the biggest, boldest literary device in the galaxy—otherwise known as hyperbole,
  • snip out some syllables, thanks to contractions,
  • see how juicy verbs can inject energy into writing, and so much more!

Purchase the book.

Get the Dart.


Brave Writer Arrow
Arrow (ages 11-12)

Finding Langston by Lesa Cline-Ransome

This historical fiction novel takes us to Chicago’s postwar South Side where a boy named Langston discovers the power of poetry and the people who create it! A story that will warm your day, even if it’s snowing where you are!*

February’s literary device is First-person Narrative. Discover the power of stories told from a main character’s point of view.

We’ll also: 

  • assess apostrophes,
  • announce amazing articles,
  • play with poetry,
  • find out what’s happening with action beats,
  • locate, look at, and learn about commas, and so much more! 

*Note About Content: Although this gentle coming-of-age story is ultimately one of hope and understanding, parents should be aware that just before the book’s opening, the narrator’s mother passes away, a fact that’s wrestled with as the story unfolds.

Purchase the book.

Get the Arrow.


Brave Writer Boomerang
Boomerang (ages 13-14)

Angel of Greenwood by Randi Pink

Watch Isaiah and Angel debate the teachings of Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois and then decide what your family thinks!*

In this Boomerang, we’ll:

  • justify juxtaposition,
  • highlight historical fiction,
  • pick apart point-of-view,
  • dabble in dependent clauses,
  • notice narrative tension,
  • label literary foils, and so much more! 

*Note About Content: While ultimately hopeful and uplifting, Angel of Greenwood addresses harsh realities of history and depicts teenage romance (including kissing but nothing sexually graphic). We encourage you, the parent, to pre-read this novel to be sure it is right for your family. 

Purchase the book.

Get the Boomerang.


For ages 15-18, check out the Slingshot.


Brave Writer

Posted in Arrow, Boomerang, BW products, Language Arts | Comments Off on Mechanics & Literature: February 2023

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