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A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

Thoughts from my home to yours

Archive for the ‘Students’ Category

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A Story within a Story and Parenthetical Asides

Owl and Tomy

Hi Julie,

Tomy (8years old) wrote a story after reading Navigating Early, and learning about a story within a story. The name of the story is “Owl’s Adventures.”

Owl’s Adventures with Aliens
(First Version)

Owl was walking one day looking for his house, when he walked off a cliff and forgot he could fly.

Suddenly, he disappeared. Next thing he knew, he was in an Alien Ship. The Aliens were taking him straight to the laboratory in Planet X-24, from the Galaxy of X-2000.

Then Owl disappeared again. Next thing he knew, he was in the laboratory XF5. He seemed to be inside a sticky slimy green substance. And it seemed to be making him into a liquid.

Next thing he knew, Owl the Liquid was put in a jar, and labelled Owl the Liquid. He was sent straight to the Alien Pet Store X5-2000.

A VERY strange Alien lady bought him. She was squishing him around. Then she put him back in his jar, and put the jar in her beaming machine, and he was sent straight back to the Cliff where he had been falling (remember, Owl was in a jar, and he was a liquid).

When the jar crushed onto the rocks below, the jar broke, and the next thing he knew, it was that all his liquid was running down the river!

Then Owl was so scared in that river that he yelled, “AHHHH!” That woke him up!

He was in the Raptor Center, with doctors all around him. He had broken his wing when he fell off the Cliff. He had fainted. And that was what this silly story was about.

He then added parenthetical asides to the story and created a second version of the story, while learning about parenthetical asides in the Chitty Chitty Bang Bang lessons.

Owl’s Adventures with Aliens
(Second Version)

Owl was walking one day looking for his house (Owl is always looking for his house! Read Owl’s other adventures for more information), when he walked off a cliff and forgot he could fly.

Suddenly, he disappeared. Next thing he knew, he was in an Alien Ship (I haven’t told you this yet, but the last thing that Owl has ever wanted in his whole entire life, and after, is to go face to face, or even see, or get a tiny bit of sight of any Alien or Alien activity). The Aliens were taking him straight to the laboratory in Planet X-24, from the Galaxy X-2000 (I haven’t told you yet, but Owl is terrified with laboratories, planets, and space. Although he lives on a planet, Owl is terrified of his own planet!).

Then Owl disappeared again. Next thing he knew, he was in the laboratory XF5. He seemed to be inside a sticky slimy green substance. And it seemed to be making him into a liquid.

Next thing he knew, Owl the Liquid was put in a jar, and labelled Owl the Liquid (Owl is also terrified with liquids, although he needs to drink liquids, so he only drinks a drop a day. He thinks if he drinks too much liquid, he will fall unconscious and die!). He was sent straight to the Alien Pet Store X5-2000.

A VERY strange Alien lady bought him (any time Owl sees a little bit of something strange he faints). She was squishing him around (Owl hates to be squished around!). Then she put him back in his jar, and put the jar in her beaming machine (Owl loves Star Trek, but he skips all the parts where they even talk about beaming), and he was sent straight back to the Cliff where he had been falling (remember, Owl was in a jar, and he was a liquid).

When the jar crushed onto the rocks below, the jar broke, and the next thing he knew, it was that all his liquid was running down the river! (Remember, Owl is terrified with liquids!)

Then Owl was so scared in that river that he yelled, “AHHHH!” That woke him up.

He was in the Raptor Center, with doctors all around him. He had broken his wing when he fell off the Cliff. He had fainted. And that was what this silly story was about.

We have really liked all the books (we are using last years’ Arrow), and we are having lots of fun with the program.

We just wanted to share this stories with you and thank you for your wonderful program.

Sincerely,
Patty

Image (cc)

Posted in Arrow, Students | Comments Off on A Story within a Story and Parenthetical Asides

Creativity Is Contagious

Creativity_is_contagious_background

Hi Julie,

I attended your sessions at the Organization of Virginia Homeschoolers last March, and I came away very inspired. I wanted to drop you a quick note to say thanks for your encouragement in meeting my child where she is at in writing. We casually used (and are using) Jot It Down last year and this year. After the conference, I added into our program a 5 minute free-write once a week. As you talked about in your presentation, my daughter was very resistant. But, I offered to have her dictate to me, and she became more agreeable.

This morning she begged to start working on a story on our home computer, by herself. I’m attaching what she’s written so far. I’m so grateful for your advice in your presentation to not edit her creative work!!!! Thank you!! Thank you!!! Thank you!!! Her excitement about her creativity in her story is contagious, and, had I not heard you speak, I’m afraid I would have accidentally squashed it by editing her work or by being resistant to helping her spell words as she went.

Without further ado, here is her (un)edited story (she’s 8.5):

Chapter 1

Then I saw it the castle the hunted castle. I opened the doors and saw that frankenstein was down under me. I was scared. I tiptoed past where I can see him. Then there was many other doors in the room. I opened a door and there was ghost! I was scared. The next door I opened there was potions. I saw one potions that gave you a horse! I tried it out. It worked! I got a black painted horse. You can travel with it if you keep the glass bottle with it. I read it of the note by the way. I figure out how to put it in and out of the glass bottle. I put the horse in the glass bottle. Then I went to the next room. It was a jungle! I moved to the next room. It was where you can try your new horse! I got my horse out and went riding. It was so much fun! Once I put my horse back in the glass bottle then I went to the next room and it was a winter wonder land! I played for a while. The next room I went in there was chocolate chips! Big and small!

Thank you again for your guidance,
Renee

Image (cc)

Posted in Email, Students | Comments Off on Creativity Is Contagious

Her son refused to write, but look at him now!

Give son a voice 1

From Brave Writer parent, Jen:

Thank you for helping me to give my son a voice!

You have given my son life!!!! Thank you!!! I am reading Writers Jungle and that has made me rethink my school day….. My parenting!

My son who has refused to write, who threw fits and cried when it was time now can not stop telling stories is not crying when it is time for writing. He wrote this. From the first arrow exercise.

Give son a voice 2

THANK YOU.

Jen

Image (cc)

Posted in Students | Comments Off on Her son refused to write, but look at him now!

Student Spotlight: Tomy!

http://www.dreamstime.com/stock-image-santa-s-sleigh-image27793471

We love it when Brave Writer students share their writing with us! Tomy (age 8) wrote a holiday poem for an Arrow project. He says:

I would of never write this verse if wasn’t for the book Inside Out and Back Again and the Arrow project. I never read free verse before so Thanhha Lai inspired me to write in free verse, and I thought it was fun!

Thanhha Lai writes about what is important to her, so I wrote something important to me. Christmas is very important to me and I am always wondering how Santa travels since I don’t believe he travels by Reindeer.

I did really enjoy organizing my free verse with lots of one word lines.

Here is Tomy’s poem:

Everything is wrong

I like to hear
bells,
they have a
ringing
sound.

I like to see
decorations,
they are lited up
and
glittering.

But everything is
wrong,
because
Santa
travels every
year
in
something
different.

Image © Waupee | Dreamstime.com

Posted in Poetry, Students | Comments Off on Student Spotlight: Tomy!

Student Spotlight: Eleanor Nash

Eleanor NashCongrats to Brave Writer Eleanor Nash for being published in The Kansas City Star! She writes:

I took Brave Writer’s High School Writing Project class this spring, and in the class I wrote an essay. I submitted the essay to my city’s newspaper and this Wednesday it was printed.

Thank you for the writing help,

Eleanor Nash

 

Here’s the opening of Eleanor’s article:

The Internet can bring teens together

By ELEANOR NASH Special to The Star
09/23/2014

Scrolling a while back through the comments on BuzzFeed’s “26 Reasons Why 2014 Has Already Been The Worst Year Ever For Teens,” I came across this statement: “Just another list among many of why this generation sucks and will probably be the downfall of the USA.”

Such comments are not unusual. Teenagers are often portrayed in the media as wild, hopeless, dumb, doomed, uncontrollable and overall a disgrace to their elders.

But this attitude is nothing new…

Read the rest here.

Way to go, Eleanor! We’re so proud of you and all our Brave Writer students!

Image @ The Kansas City Star

Posted in Students | 1 Comment »

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