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A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

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[Podcast #318] For the Kids: Meet the Lighthouse Family

Brave Writer Podcast

What happens when we slow down and really listen to the language of a story?

In this special Brave Writer podcast episode for kids and parents, we cozy up with Cynthia Rylant’s Lighthouse Family series and unpack a delicious opening passage from The Storm. We notice how sound, mood, adjectives, and even compound words work together to paint Pandora the lighthouse cat’s lonely world—and we share simple ways to turn those discoveries into:

  • copywork,
  • scavenger hunts,
  • and rich family discussion.

Join us as we read, notice, and play with language—then keep the magic going in your own read-aloud time.

Show Notes

One of our favorite things to do as home educators is to read aloud with our kids. But there’s a subtle shift that can turn a simple storytime into a rich apprenticeship in writing: reading like writers.

  • Why this word and not that one?
  • Why start the story here?
  • Why does a single sentence feel so sad or so thrilling?

Those questions aren’t just academic; they’re invitations into craft.

The Power of a Single Sentence

Take a sentence like “She found herself sighing long, deep, lonely sighs.” We meet a character who is isolated, but instead of being told “She was very lonely,” we feel it in our bodies. The repetition, the commas, the triple stack of adjectives—it all creates a slow, weighted rhythm.

When we read like this with our kids, we can pause and ask: What makes this sentence so powerful? How would it feel if we changed one of those adjectives? What if we took the commas out? We’re not administering a quiz; we’re inviting curiosity. Our children learn, almost by osmosis, that word choice and punctuation carry emotion.

Playing with Sound

Sound devices like alliteration, assonance, and consonance can seem like abstract literary terms until you hear them working in a story. “In a lonely lighthouse, far from city and town, far from the comfort of friends…” rolls off the tongue like a gentle wave.

Instead of handing our kids a definition, we can point to the line and say, “Do you hear all those L sounds? How does that make it feel?” From there, we can play: try writing our own description of a place using repeated sounds, or go on a “sound scavenger hunt” in today’s read-aloud. Learning becomes a game instead of a worksheet.

Seeing the Story Beneath the Story

We also love to notice how authors handle time. A flashback, for example, doesn’t just fill in backstory; it reveals what matters most to a character. When a writer drops us into a memory of a storm at sea and a ship saved by a lighthouse, we see why tending a light later becomes a vocation of the heart.

These are beautiful conversations to have with our kids: What is this character afraid of? What do they love? How does the past explain who they are now? Suddenly, reading isn’t only about plot; it’s about empathy.

Turning Noticing into Practice

All this noticing naturally spills into our children’s own writing. Once they’ve hunted for compound words in a chapter book, they start inventing their own. Once they’ve collected homophones, they delight in spotting them in the wild. Once they’ve experienced how a powerful verb like “howled” or “crashed” changes a scene, “said” and “went” start to feel boring.

We don’t have to lecture about any of this. We simply:

  • keep reading aloud, pausing now and then to marvel together,
  • ask big, juicy questions,
  • and treat literary devices like a spice cabinet we can open and smell.

Over time, our kids internalize what good writing feels like. And when they sit down to write—even if it’s just a sentence or two at first—they have a rich store of rhythms, images, and structures to draw from.

That’s the quiet magic of reading like writers: we aren’t just passing the time or checking off a language arts box. We’re building a shared language of craft and a lifelong love of stories, together.

Resources

  • Order the Lighthouse Family issue of the Dart here (available Jan. 1, 2026)
  • Find the Lighthouse Family books in the Brave Writer Book Shop
  • Brave Writer class registration is open! 
  • Visit Julie’s Substack to find her special podcast for kids (and a lot more!) 
  • Purchase Julie’s new book, Help! My Kid Hates Writing
  • Find community at Brave Learner Home
  • Learn more about the Brave Writer Literature & Mechanics programs
  • Start a free trial of CTCmath.com to try the math program that’s sure to grab and keep your child’s attention
  • Subscribe to Julie’s Substack newsletters, Brave Learning with Julie Bogart and Julie Off Topic, and Melissa’s Catalog of Enthusiasms
  • Sign up for our Text Message Pod Ring to get podcast updates and more!
  • Send us podcast topic ideas by texting us: +1 (833) 947-3684
  • Interested in advertising with us? Reach out to media@bravewriter.com

Connect with Julie

  • Instagram: @juliebogartwriter
  • Threads: @juliebogartwriter
  • Bluesky: @bravewriter.com
  • Facebook: facebook.com/bravewriter

Connect with Melissa

  • Website: melissawiley.com
  • Substack: melissawiley.substack.com
  • Instagram: @melissawileybooks
  • Bluesky: @melissawiley.bsky.social

Produced by NOVA

Brave Writer Podcast

Posted in Homeschool Advice, Podcasts | Comments Off on [Podcast #318] For the Kids: Meet the Lighthouse Family

[Podcast #317] Hygge Homeschool for the Holidays

Brave Writer Podcast

As the leaves turn and the days shorten, there’s a distinct shift in the air – it’s the cozy season, a time for warmth, reflection, and connection. This season, we’re revisiting one of our favorite conversations about embracing the Danish concept of hygge (pronounced “hoo-ga”) in our homeschooling journey. Hygge is all about creating a warm atmosphere and enjoying the good things in life with good people. It’s the warmth of morning light streaming through the window, the comfort of a hot cup of cocoa, the joy of a shared story.

In this replayed Brave Writer podcast episode, we delve into how hygge can transform the homeschooling experience. As the season changes, so does the rhythm of our homes and our approach to education. It’s a time to slow down, to savor, and to connect more deeply with our children through learning and play.

Go here for the complete Show Notes.

Resources

  • Start a free trial of CTCmath.com to try the math program that’s sure to grab and keep your child’s attention!
  • English Tea Store: englishteastore.com
  • Read: The Art of Noticing by Rob Walker
  • Read: Outside Lies Magic by John Stilgoe
  • Some of the games mentioned:
  • Hero Kids: https://www.heroforgegames.com/hero-kids/
  • Amazing Tales: https://amazing-tales.net/
  • Expedition (free pdf): https://expeditiongame.com/print-and-play (for all ages)
  • Your Very Own Village (free pdf): https://www.onwardheroes.com/yourveryownvillage
  • MouseGuard RPG: https://www.mouse-guard.net/rpg
  • Sign up for our Text Message Pod Ring to get podcast updates and more!
  • Send us podcast topic ideas by texting us: +1 (833) 947-3684
  • Want help getting started with Brave Writer? Go 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: @juliebogartwriter
  • Threads: @juliebogartwriter
  • Bluesky: @bravewriter.com
  • Facebook: facebook.com/bravewriter

Connect with Melissa

  • Website: melissawiley.com
  • Substack: melissawiley.substack.com
  • Instagram: @melissawileybooks
  • Bluesky: @melissawiley.bsky.social

Produced by NOVA

Brave Writer Podcast

Posted in Podcasts | Comments Off on [Podcast #317] Hygge Homeschool for the Holidays

[Podcast #316] When Your Middlers Lack Interest

Brave Writer Podcast

What do we do when our tweens and teens don’t seem “into” anything?

In this Brave Writer podcast episode, we explore how to revive interest, curiosity, and motivation in the middle school years—without forcing artificial enthusiasm.

We talk about:

  • why middlers may seem disengaged,
  • how risk and adventure replace the “magic” of early childhood learning,
  • and how deep dives, conversation, boredom, and flexibility can open doors to authentic passion.

We also share practical scripts, examples from our own families, and tools for nurturing critical thinking and connection.

Show Notes

Middle school can feel like unfamiliar territory for many homeschoolers. The cozy magic that carried us through the elementary years suddenly seems mismatched to our tweens, who often appear restless, bored, or unsure about what interests them. As academic expectations rise, we may feel pressure to keep everything moving forward, even when our kids seem to stall. But the middle years are ripe with possibility if we’re willing to rethink how learning works.

Risk and Adventure Replace Early-Education Magic

One thing we’ve noticed is that the enchantment of the early years often comes from surprise and mystery: the twinkle lights, the themed read-alouds, the cozy writing moments. But tweens and teens are wired for something different. They’re ready for risk and adventure. Not necessarily cliff jumping or grand excursions—though sometimes that too—but the intellectual and emotional risks that come with forming opinions, exploring new worlds, and stepping outside familiar perspectives.

Rather than expecting them to declare a clear passion, we make space for them to discover one. For many kids, interest begins quietly. It emerges through consumption—books, films, fandoms, video games, music—long before it shows up as creative output. We sometimes forget that mastering a subject begins with taking in mountains of input. College students and graduate-level scholars spend years consuming before producing original work. When our middlers are devouring books or revisiting a favorite hobby, they are building vocabulary, context, and insight that later become the foundation of mature thinking.

Conversation as a Catalyst for Understanding

We also find that conversation fuels understanding. When we listen, truly listen, to our kids talk about what they love, they refine their ideas in real time. Some families build this into group activities like movie nights or book clubs; others find it easier to talk through a WhatsApp thread or emails with grandparents. However it happens, the back-and-forth deepens thinking and strengthens connection.

But sometimes, before interest emerges, there’s boredom. In a world full of instant entertainment, boredom can feel like a problem. But it’s actually the fertile soil of creativity. When we carve out device-free space and keep enticing materials accessible—binoculars, art supplies, maps, kitchen tools—we give our kids the freedom to wander mentally and physically. That meandering often leads to unexpected discoveries. The child who seems apathetic one week may suddenly be whittling wood, researching constellations, or organizing a geocaching route the next.

Inviting Kids Into the Process

The secret is transparency. Instead of changing course quietly, we invite our kids into the process: “I’ve noticed we’re all feeling a little stuck. I’d love to experiment with giving ourselves some free space every day to explore ideas or interests. It might feel boring at first, but I think something good could come out of it.” When we model curiosity and honesty, our kids feel respected and more willing to take their own risks.

The Power of the Middle School Transition

Middle school isn’t a dead zone of interest. It’s a transition zone. A place where kids shed childhood patterns and begin shaping who they are. When we provide spaciousness, conversation, and gentle encouragement, we help them step into the adventurous, risk-taking thinkers they’re becoming. And along the way, we rediscover a little of our own curiosity, too.

Resources

  • Listen to our interview with Chris Balme, and find his book Challenge Accepted: 50 Adventures to Make Middle School Awesome in the Brave Writer Book Shop
  • Brave Writer class registration is open! 
  • Visit Julie’s Substack to find her special podcast for kids (and a lot more!) 
  • Purchase Julie’s new book, Help! My Kid Hates Writing
  • Find community at Brave Learner Home
  • Learn more about the Brave Writer Literature & Mechanics programs
  • Start a free trial of CTCmath.com to try the math program that’s sure to grab and keep your child’s attention
  • Subscribe to Julie’s Substack newsletters, Brave Learning with Julie Bogart and Julie Off Topic, and Melissa’s Catalog of Enthusiasms
  • Sign up for our Text Message Pod Ring to get podcast updates and more!
  • Send us podcast topic ideas by texting us: +1 (833) 947-3684

Connect with Julie

  • Instagram: @juliebogartwriter
  • Threads: @juliebogartwriter
  • Bluesky: @bravewriter.com
  • Facebook: facebook.com/bravewriter

Connect with Melissa

  • Bluesky: @melissawiley.bsky.social
  • Website: melissawiley.com
  • Substack: melissawiley.substack.com
  • Instagram: @melissawileybooks

Produced by NOVA

Brave Writer Podcast

Posted in Podcasts | Comments Off on [Podcast #316] When Your Middlers Lack Interest

[Podcast #315] The 8 Stages of Homeschooling

Brave Writer Podcast

How do we move from “I think I want to homeschool” to “We’ve created an education that fits us”?

In this Brave Writer podcast episode, we walk through the eight natural stages homeschool parents experience, from jumping in without a clue, to swapping curriculum in search of the “perfect” program, to finally trusting ourselves and embracing “us schooling.”

We share real stories from our own homeschools, talk about ideological pressure from methods and social media, and offer practical ideas for planning from behind and building a routine you can bend without breaking.

Tune in to discover your stage and what might come next, and then join us to share where you are in your journey!

Show Notes

The longer we homeschool, the more we realize that we’re not just teaching our kids—we’re growing up as educators right alongside them. No one hands us a diploma that says “qualified homeschool parent.” Instead, we move through a series of stages, slowly gaining confidence in our ability to craft an education that fits our families.

Getting Started: Jumping In

Many of us start with a rush of enthusiasm. We catch a glimpse of what home education could be—through a book, a podcast, an Instagram account, or the chaos of online schooling—and we jump in. We buy the books, order the curriculum, and suddenly our children are looking at us like, “Okay, how does this work?” That feeling of being underprepared is not a sign you’re failing; it’s often the first stage of growth.

Recreating What We Know

From there, it’s natural to “play school.” We recreate the classroom we remember: bulletin boards, workbooks lined up in magazine files, color-coded schedules. We’re trying to make learning look official, because that’s what we know. Over time, though, we notice a gap between the tidy plan and the messy reality of family life. Someone melts down, someone’s sick, someone’s building an elaborate Lego world during read-aloud time—and, secretly, we’d rather join them than fight it.

Exploring Methods

That’s when we often discover methods. Charlotte Mason, unschooling, classical education, Montessori, Waldorf—each offers a philosophy that promises deeper learning. We read books like The Well-Trained Mind and John Holt’s Learning All the Time. We join communities and try on new language: living books, strewing, narration, nature study, project-based learning. This can feel like getting a personal master’s degree in education. At the same time, the pressure to “do it right” according to a method can be intense. It’s easy to believe that if we just followed the rules more faithfully, everything would finally run smoothly.

Curriculum Swapping and Second-Guessing

When the method stops working—or doesn’t fit every child—many of us slide into the curriculum-swapping stage. We collect programs the way other people collect hobby supplies. A shiny new resource appears on social media and we wonder, “Am I shortchanging my kids if we don’t use that too?” Underneath all the second-guessing is fear: fear that there is a secret right answer out there, and we haven’t found it yet.

Building Confidence Over Time

What gradually changes is not our children or the market of materials, but us. After enough experiments, we start to notice patterns. We:

  • see which routines hold us together and which expectations always backfire,
  • pay attention to how each child learns best,
  • and begin to trust that a consistent, flexible rhythm—a shared read-aloud, some language arts, a bit of math, space for science, history, and play—can carry more weight than any single book or program.

Seeing Growth Through Planning From Behind

We also discover the power of “planning from behind.” When we chronicle what actually happens in a notebook or blog rather than obsessing over undone plans, we start to see growth that would otherwise be invisible. A struggle that felt overwhelming in October has quietly eased by April. A child who once resisted writing is now creating comics or stories for fun. Those realizations build our confidence more than any external approval ever could.

Arriving at Us Schooling

Eventually, we arrive at a place we might call “us schooling.” We’re no longer trying to fit someone else’s mold. Instead, we’ve pieced together an education that reflects our family’s values, capacities, quirks, and dreams. It’s not perfect. There are still hard days and unfinished assignments. But there is a growing sense of calm: we know our kids, we know ourselves, and we trust the learning that unfolds in the middle of real life.

Wherever you are on this continuum—jumping in, swapping curriculum, or quietly owning your “us school”—you’re not behind. You’re in process. And that process is exactly how you become the educator your children need.

Resources

  • Read Julie’s post on this topic here: Brave Writer Podcast: Natural Stages of Growth as a Home Educator – A Brave Writer’s Life in Brief
  • Natural Stages of Growth in Writing
  • Visit the Brave Writer Book Shop
  • Brave Writer class registration is open! 
  • Visit Julie’s Substack to find her special podcast for kids (and a lot more!) 
  • Purchase Julie’s new book, Help! My Kid Hates Writing
  • Brave Learner Home
  • Learn more about the Brave Writer Literature & Mechanics programs
  • Start a free trial of CTCmath.com to try the math program that’s sure to grab and keep your child’s attention
  • Subscribe to Julie’s Substack newsletters, Brave Learning with Julie Bogart and Julie Off Topic, and Melissa’s Catalog of Enthusiasms
  • Sign up for our Text Message Pod Ring to get podcast updates and more!
  • Send us podcast topic ideas by texting us: +1 (833) 947-3684

Connect with Julie

  • Instagram: @juliebogartwriter
  • Threads: @juliebogartwriter
  • Bluesky: @bravewriter.com
  • Facebook: facebook.com/bravewriter

Connect with Melissa

  • Bluesky: @melissawiley.bsky.social
  • Website: melissawiley.com
  • Substack: melissawiley.substack.com
  • Instagram: @melissawileybooks

Produced by NOVA

Brave Writer Podcast

Posted in Podcasts | Comments Off on [Podcast #315] The 8 Stages of Homeschooling

[Podcast #314] Two Honest Thoughts About Tech in Homeschool

Brave Writer Podcast

Is tech quietly ruining your homeschool?

In this Brave Writer podcast episode, we explore what happens when we trade the shared adventure of learning at home for one-child-one-screen schooling.

We look at:

  • why so many of us feel pressured to meet standards,
  • how online platforms promise to “save” us,
  • and what our kids might be losing when learning is reduced to logins, slides, and quizzes.

We also imagine a different path: learning as a lifestyle, full of real conversations, messy projects, and magic moments that don’t fit into a metric.

Tune in, then join us in reclaiming the joy of being learners together at home.

Show Notes

If you’ve homeschooled for any length of time, you’ve probably noticed a shift. Where home education once meant cozy mornings with books, baking, and science experiments at the kitchen table, more and more families are turning to sleek online platforms that promise to handle everything for us. Kids log in, work through modules, and we receive reassuring dashboards of data.  

We understand the appeal. Many of us want the fruit of homeschooling—delight-led learning, flexible schedules, freedom from school dysfunction—without the constant pressure of planning, teaching, and troubleshooting. When life is already full, “homeschool in a box” can feel like mercy.  

Tech as a Tempting Shortcut  

Online programs offer exactly what tired parents crave: independent work, built-in accountability, and the sense that someone else has thought of all the subjects and standards our kids “should” be covering. We can work, run a household, or care for younger children while a platform delivers lessons on geology, grammar, and everything in between.  

The trouble isn’t the occasional online class. Used as a “turbo boost” for a specific subject or season, tech can be a gift. The problem comes when those platforms take over the *whole* day. Our kids begin to associate learning with screens, quizzes, and progress bars instead of with real people, real conversations, and the real world. We risk becoming homeschool managers rather than home educators—referees enforcing someone else’s system instead of partners in our children’s curiosity.  

Learning as a Lifestyle, Not a Metric  

Homeschooling gets complicated when we treat it as a DIY version of school: same standards, same benchmarks, just at the kitchen table. We worry about grade-level expectations and test scores, then wonder why our kids resist or shut down. Underneath their squirming and “I hate this” complaints is often a simple fear: “If I really try and I’m not good at it, I’ll disappoint you.”  

What if we laid down the yardstick for a while?  

When we stop obsessing over how our children compare to an invisible average, we’re free to notice something far more important: Are they meaningfully engaged? Do they light up over certain topics? Do they feel safe enough to try, fail, and try again? Real learning connotes use; it happens when kids are doing something that matters to them—baking, filming, coding, building forts, writing stories for a sibling—not just filling in boxes on a screen.  

Making Room for Real-Life Learning  

This is the daring idea at the heart of home education: an ordinary parent is good enough to create a rich learning life. Not a Pinterest-perfect life, not a constantly magical one—but a life where there’s time to explore, daydream, tinker, and talk.  

That might look like:  

  • A simple daily routine with pockets of unstructured time.  
  • Short bursts of skill work (a math page, a phonics lesson, a bit of copywork).  
  • Immediate, meaningful application: Yahtzee after math, read-alouds after phonics, freewriting once handwriting is in place.  
  • Shared adventures—nature walks, museum trips, documentaries, kitchen experiments—that no algorithm could have predicted.  

When we toggle gently between skills and application, without turning every experience into a graded performance, we string together what we like to call “pearls”: those unexpected moments when something clicks, a project takes off, or a child does something new simply because they care.  

We aren’t against tech, hybrid schools, or co-ops. We’re for using the hours we *do* have with our kids to offer something different from metric-driven education: a taste of learning as joyful, relational, and deeply human. When our children discover that they are learners—not just students—we’ve given them a gift no platform can replicate.

Resources

  • Visit Julie’s Substack to find her post on this topic
  • Visit our “Tools for the Art of Writing” page in the Brave Writer Book Shop
  • Explore our lineup of engaging writing classes
  • Purchase Julie’s new book, Help! My Kid Hates Writing
  • Brave Learner Home: https://bravewriter.com/brave-learner-home
  • Learn more about the Brave Writer Literature & Mechanics programs
  • Start a free trial of CTCmath.com to try the math program that’s sure to grab and keep your child’s attention
  • Subscribe to Julie’s Substack newsletters, Brave Learning with Julie Bogart and Julie Off Topic, and Melissa’s Catalog of Enthusiasms
  • Sign up for our Text Message Pod Ring to get podcast updates and more!
  • Send us podcast topic ideas by texting us: +1 (833) 947-3684

Connect with Julie

  • Instagram: @juliebogartwriter
  • Threads: @juliebogartwriter
  • Bluesky: @bravewriter.com
  • Facebook: facebook.com/bravewriter

Connect with Melissa

  • Bluesky: @melissawiley.bsky.social
  • Website: melissawiley.com
  • Substack: melissawiley.substack.com
  • Instagram: @melissawileybooks

Produced by NOVA

Brave Writer Podcast

Posted in Podcasts | Comments Off on [Podcast #314] Two Honest Thoughts About Tech in Homeschool

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