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A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

Thoughts from my home to yours

Archive for the ‘Homeschool Advice’ Category

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Homebound Interviews: Homeschooling Support during Confinement

We Can Do It

Rosie the Riveter was an American icon of female strength and our symbol in Brave Writer of what it means to use that strength for good.

I found the lunchbox in the photo above last Christmas in a shop in Columbus OH. What struck me as much as J Howard Miller’s illustration of her were the words at the top: “We can do it!”

We can! In this moment, we’re pulling together to do this remarkable thing—making the choice to social distance in order to protect one another.

To help provide support during this out-of-the-ordinary time I’ve been sharing how to homeschool during the pandemic in the following places:

  • NPR’s Jefferson Exchange: A Library of Homeschool Knowledge in One Person
  • The Art of Parenting: Learning at Home
  • New York Times: Home Schooling, Simplified
  • Independent, UK: 9 best homeschooling books to educate kids during lockdown
  • Bloomberg News: Screen-Time Substitutes for Kids Stuck at Home
  • Psychologists Off The Clock: Educating Our Kids at Home
  • Pantsuit Politics: Problems and Priorities in Education
  • Brightly: Tips on Balancing Virtual Learning and Work for Parents
  • Chicago Tribune: Thinking of homeschooling? Here’s how to do it.
  • The Epoch Times: Teaching Your Child to Write
  • Shondaland: What Parents Should Know About Homeschooling

Remember: We CAN do it! Together.


Brave Writer Podcast

Tags: Media
Posted in Homeschool Advice, Podcasts, Speaking Schedule | Comments Off on Homebound Interviews: Homeschooling Support during Confinement

Be the Bridge of Warmth and Kindness

Be the Bridge of Warmth and Kindness

“The problem—as I’ve said for years—is that it is hardly ever possible to separate what we think about something from how we feel about it.” ~John Holt

One of my favorite John Holt quotes. I remember being taken with the idea that our feelings provide the ground floor of our relationship to any subject.

I often tell parents who’ve neglected writing, at least they haven’t damaged their writers!

When you want to incite interest, pair the subject with a

  • nurturing,
  • surprising,
  • mysterious, or
  • adventurous context.

Imagine how the subject will feel, not just what information you expect your kids to retain. If you do that, you’re halfway there before you start!

If, however, the subject feels tedious or torturous, it may take a little recovery time.

  • Take a break.
  • Ease into the subject with a game or pair it with treats.
  • Sidle up to your child (not standing over, not across from), and do it together.

Be the bridge of warmth and kindness while your child bravely faces what was previously painful.

You can do it!


This post is originally from Instagram and @juliebogartwriter is my account there so come follow along for more conversations like this one!


The Homeschool Alliance

Posted in Homeschool Advice | Comments Off on Be the Bridge of Warmth and Kindness

Bring Your Friendship Voice to the Table

Shared Learning Mode: Bring Your Friendship Voice to the Table

Move into “shared learning mode” (instead of “teacher mode”) when home educating.

Be the one who:

  • is curious,
  • doesn’t know all the answers,
  • wonders aloud,
  • is inspired by a child’s idea,
  • gets a kick out of her kid’s antics.

Let go of your need to be obeyed, thanked, and appreciated.

It’s a little shift—a tiny tweak, really, to sit on the same side of the learning table as your child. It’s the unique opportunity that is not always possible in school.

Lucky us!


The Brave Learner

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, Homeschool Advice | Comments Off on Bring Your Friendship Voice to the Table

Tending Our Garden of Home Education

Tending Our Garden of Home Education

I address the topic of what I call “The Invisible Education” in my book, The Brave Learner. I felt that it was important to squarely face the lived experiences of homeschooled children (many now adults) who grew up in toxic family environments that were hidden within the homeschool context.

Early adopters in particular had a stake in proving the superiority of home education and sometimes parents and their communities covered up their failures to protect the movement rather than children. It’s important to face that unique dynamic honestly and to put ourselves into healthy accountability (which is why I talk about abuse so frequently).

I have received messages from moms letting me know that they came to awareness of the abusive atmosphere in their families reading posts I’ve shared. That’s good. We need to do that—to tell the truth, to support women in particular as they stand up to control or mistreatment. It’s on us to name it for what it is.

Even with that awareness, I am still unhappy with the framing of the issue that somehow homeschooling creates a more dangerous context than traditionally schooled kids. Not true!

What we all want to face is the danger of:

  • authoritarian control,
  • shame,
  • blame,
  • bullying; and
  • adults exploiting children when children are meant to trust them.

This kind of “power over” happens in loads of adult-child contexts.

Teachers, coaches, daycare workers, parents, aunts and uncles, grandparents, employers, directors, referees, and instructors—all carry responsibility to be fair and kind to children. It starts with all of us calling out abuse—learning what it is, then bravely naming it, then standing up to it for the sake of children. Period.

Let’s tend our garden of home education. Let’s not tolerate cruelty, toxic control, or violence against children in our space. That’s my plea. We work on this stuff with parents in our online classes, and in the Homeschool Alliance. Because it matters—and creates the best conditions for a thriving education—for learning.

xo Julie (recovering from abuse in my own life)


This post is originally from Instagram and @juliebogartwriter is my account there so come follow along for more conversations like this one!


The Homeschool Alliance

Posted in Homeschool Advice | Comments Off on Tending Our Garden of Home Education

“Less is More” Checklist

"Less is More" Checklist
Boad game pictured: Carcassonne

Which are you? A “less is more” or a “more is more” person?

I’m the latter who daily reminds herself to do less, that my less leads to more: more satisfaction, more ease, more peace, less clutter, less striving, less frazzled and self-defeating.

Whenever you need to ease into homeschooling (after the holidays or a vacation or a busy season of life) then you should feel free to test the “less is more” theory of learning.

I’ve made a SHORT list below (less is more!) to help you. The list covers:

  • reading,
  • science,
  • history,
  • literature,
  • math,
  • handwriting,
  • original writing, and
  • following directions.
Less is More Checklist

This is enough for a whole month—in fact, pick one day a week for games, and you’ve got it!

Imagine the rabbit trails from a library visit alone. And baking and cooking lead to chemistry and math lessons in real life (Quick tip: read PIE by Sarah Weeks and bake the pies from each chapter).


This post is originally from Instagram and @juliebogartwriter is my account there so come follow along for more conversations like this one!

Posted in Homeschool Advice | Comments Off on “Less is More” Checklist

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