General Archives - Page 14 of 126 - A Brave Writer's Life in Brief A Brave Writer's Life in Brief
  • Start Here
    • For Families
      Multiple Ages
    • Ages 5-7
      Beginning Writers
    • Ages 8-10
      Emerging Writers
    • Ages 11-12
      Middle School Writers
    • Ages 13-14
      High School Writers
    • Ages 15-18
      College Prep Writers
  • Shop
    • Product Collections
    • Bundles
    • Writing Instruction Manuals
    • Literature & Grammar/Punctuation
    • Composition Formats
    • Literature Singles
    • Homeschool Help
    • Fall Conference
  • Online Classes
    • Class Descriptions
    • Class Schedule
    • Classroom
    • How Our Classes Work
    • Our Writing Coaches
    • Classes FAQ
  • Community
    • Brave Learner Home
    • Blog
    • Podcast
    • Calendar
    • Brave Writer's Day Off
  • Cart
  • My Account
    • My Online Classes
    • My Account
  • My Account
    • My Online Classes
    • My Account
  • Start Here

    If you’re new to Brave Writer, or are looking for the best products for your child or family, choose from below:

    • For Families
      Multiple Ages
    • Ages 5-7
      Beginning Writers
    • Ages 8-10
      Emerging Writers
    • Ages 11-12
      Middle School Writers
    • Ages 13-14
      High School Writers
    • Ages 15-18
      College Prep Writers
  • Shop

    If you’re already familiar with Brave Writer products, go directly to what you’re looking for:

    • Product Collections Browse the full catalog in our shop
    • Bundles Everything you need to get started
    • Writing Instruction Manuals Foundational Writing Programs
    • Literature & Grammar/Punctuation Grammar, Punctuation, Spelling & Literary Devices
    • Composition Formats Writing Assignments for Every Age
    • Literature Singles Individual Literature Handbooks
    • Homeschool Help Homeschooling Tools and Resources
    • Fall Conference Brave Writer’s Homeschool Conference in Cincinnati, OH
  • Online Classes
    • Class Descriptions
    • Class Schedule
    • Classroom
    • How Our Classes Work
    • Our Writing Coaches
    • Classes FAQ
  • Community
    • Brave Learner Home
    • Blog
    • Podcast
    • Calendar
    • Brave Writer's Day Off
  • Search
  • Cart

Search Bravewriter.com

  • Home
  • Blog

A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

Thoughts from my home to yours

Archive for the ‘General’ Category

« Older Entries
Newer Entries »

Alvin Toffler on what’s right and wrong with school

Read this article: Future School

Alvin Toffler of Future Shock fame tackles the failures of public education in this article. What I find so refreshing reading it is how homeschooling, unschooling, charter schools, independent study programs have anticipated the exhaustion of the current model of education. Check out these wonderful comments and think about how you naturally create learning:

For example: Should education be compulsory? And, if so, for who? Why does everybody have to start at age five? Maybe some kids should start at age eight and work fast. Or vice versa. Why is everything massified in the system, rather than individualized in the system? New technologies make possible customization in a way that the old system — everybody reading the same textbook at the same time — did not offer.

(more…)

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, BW and public school, General | 2 Comments »

The Skill of Writing

The skill of writing is to create a context in which other people can think. ~~Edwin Schlossberg

Posted in General | Comments Off on The Skill of Writing

Hurry! Last minute registrations for KWI, HH and Adv. Comp

Kidswrite Intermediate, Hand-Holders and Advanced Composition all start Monday. They all have space. You may not see them again until the next school year. Don’t miss your chance to get in on these important classes.

Quick notes: Kidswrite Intermediate is one of the most unique writing courses on the market! We use exploratory writing tools (specially created by me, Julie Bogart) to draw out the rhetorical thinking and linguistic creativity necessary for powerful academic essay writing and crafting in high school and college. I’m telling you – learning to write a dusty dry essay just doesn’t cut it. We’ve got to help our teens translate that spark and writing aliveness into a forceful, compelling academic writing style. Who teaches that? We do! Sign up today. Your teens will love it. It’s the most energizing, surprising class they’ll take this year. Nothing like what they’ve done before.

Hand-Holders is a brand new tool created on request from countless Brave Writer Moms. After working through KWB or The Writer’s Jungle, many moms want the comfort, accountability and support of a BW instructor to help them continue to guide their children into productive writing projects. Christine Gable, instructor, is especially equipped to help you. She’ll give you all the tools and support you need to finish out the school year strong!

And last, but most certainly not least, is Advanced Composition which I teach! I don’t get to do the online classes as much as I used to so don’t miss this chance to put your teens with me. I use all my academic experience to help your kids be up to the minute in their preparation for what colleges expect in their essay assignments. If you wonder what other kinds of essays your kids will be called on to write, these are the ones: definition and textual analysis are commonly assigned in the undergraduate programs. Don’t miss this last minute chance to get your teens ready for fall (if they’re seniors) or for the coming year of writing (if they’re juniors). I’ll happily take some precocious sophomores, too.

Register here ASAP.

Posted in BW products, General, Tips for Teen Writers, Young Writers | Comments Off on Hurry! Last minute registrations for KWI, HH and Adv. Comp

By spring, unschooling

By spring unschooling

I used to tell audiences that we had a three-pronged approach to home education: Sonlight, Charlotte Mason and Unschooling.

In Autumn:

We’d follow the Sonlight curriculum with its scheduled novels, fast clip workbooks, and history immersion. Fall brought energy and focus. I could prepare lessons, stay on top of a schedule, and take advantage of my kids’ love for crisp unused materials.

In Winter:

After the Christmas break, when bare trees, grey skies and snow took away our chance to head outdoors consistently, we moved into Charlotte Mason mode. The cozy house lent itself to fires and read alouds, candles and poetry teatimes. We’d watch birds, study pine cones, take brisk walks in barren parks or go skiing. We’d also delve into the arts: we’d visit the art museum, watch classic films, and learn to knit. Schedules felt wearying and workbooks, frayed and tired. Poetry teatimes and hand crafts, literature and the arts, nature and conversation.

By Spring:

After all that great academic effort, we’d collapse into unintended unschooling. Seemed our energies for organized education would suddenly evaporate under the glare of sunshine, spring sports and theatrical performance! We’d follow the educational muse wherever she took us. Spring turned into “party school” where we’d organize a big Gold Rush dig or we’d invite a gaggle of girls over to immerse themselves in what we’d learned about India (complete with foods, henna and saris). Field trips were so natural and easy in spring.

Today:

Now that three of the kids aren’t at home, schooling along with us, my younger two and I don’t follow a particular schedule or style. The two at home mostly wake up at about 12:00 noon. I do my work in the mornings and we have the routine of “school work” in the afternoons. Yet all those lifestyles live in me and in our home. We can and do follow a more disciplined approach to some subjects (math with a tutor has created a routine we can all sustain more happily than if I just expect the kids to learn it as they go). And we are utterly free with others (history is no longer tethered to a spine; we typically watch movies and read literature and allow history to find its way into our lives more organically; though we do use Story of the World as a good solid reference). We have lots more time and space (no more toddlers, only two sharing one computer). Conversations are deep, long and satisfying. Poetry teatimes are still a highlight.

Having grown up in our family, the younger two seem to naturally self-educate in a way that the older ones didn’t (or at least, they didn’t come to it as naturally). I’m amazed at the way each of them tackles what they want to learn. For instance, Caitrin (12) is vegan. She started as vegetarian and due to the influence of her “away-at-college” older sister, she decided to take it further. Veganism has led her to study about how food is produced in America, what conditions animals are raised in for our consumption (warning: it’s pretty graphic and ugly once you get into it), what it is to be healthy (she’s spent hours learning about nutrients, which ones she needs, how to get them), and how to cook! She’s taken over dinners, using her magazine “The Vegetarian Times” to help her produce very tasty meals for all of us.

There’s space and time for all of this because I don’t feel panicked about her education, because we don’t have toddlers, because I recognize a great learning trend when I see one. I didn’t always feel this way. I remember panicking, chasing toddlers and nursing babies, and I remember doubting that something like veganism could really lead to a quality learning experience.

What I like to say to moms when they ask me about unschooling or child-led learning: it’s all a process for you too. You’re in your own learning process about what it is to homeschool, educate, nurture and lead your children. Be patient with yourself. Affirm the good, gently let go of what doesn’t work. Over time, you will find the rhythm that is right for your family.

Brave Writer Online Writing Class Nature Journaling

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

Good writing

Good writing

You know what? Good writing is good to read. Period. You know it when you read it. You want to keep reading. That’s the test. Do I want to keep reading?

I’m bored with writing by people who haven’t spent ten minutes imagining the yawn they’re creating from the tedious, stilted prose they pour forth to a computer screen in the name of clarity.

I’d sacrifice a little clarity for the sake of a hearty chuckle. It’s just not right, in the 21st century, to think anyone has time for words strung together that plod along in life-sapping language requiring you to read them because, after all, they’re telling you about a product or service you think you might like. Please! Have a heart. Hold my attention. Don’t make me drink six cups of coffee to stay awake through the explanation.

Twitter limits tweets to 140 characters, including spaces. That’s not much time to hold anyone’s attention. Yet all day long, I’m struck by the power of the updates. People pack an incredible amount of information, insight, humor, commentary, heart, debate and chat into 140 character comments.

Meanwhile, on some websites, you can’t get a single bounce out of any sentence despite having unlimited space to create that energy! Even more criminal: on websites where writing instruction is the priority, visitors are often met with a sterile, impersonal template sharing little more than pedantic explanations about how courses work or what format structure they teach. Really? That’s the best writers can offer?

I wilt like lettuce left on the counter just reading that stuff.

It’s like we haven’t evolved. Somehow the world of writing instruction has not caught up to the world of writing consumption! The Internet is overrun with good writers and great writing. That’s because the competition for an audience is steep. People know what they like to read. They can click out of any page that drowns them in the alphabet. Readers need their linguistic hit!

So here’s my new rule of thumb: can you say it in 140 characters and make someone want to listen? If you can do that in 140, you can do it in 400, or 4,000. It’s just you gotta treat all the characters with that level of care. Even more, be your own audience. Did you laugh at your writing? Were you moved by your words? Did you find a metaphor you hadn’t ever thought of before?

Last thing: if you’re shopping for writing curricula, do the “good writing test.” If you find it hard work to read the materials, if you have to “discipline yourself” to pay attention to explanations of the classes, if you feel like writing will be a chore you must do (like eating your veggies, taking fish oil capsules and scrubbing toilets), then you’re not in the right program.

The goal of any writing instruction is that the end product is a joy to read. That only comes if the purpose of the writing is to hold the attention of the reader. And that only comes when you let go and allow your wacky, quirky, delightful take on life to weave itself into your writing.

Learn more about Brave Writer products

Posted in General | 2 Comments »

« Older Entries
Newer Entries »
  • Search the Blog

  • Julie Bogart
  • Welcome, I’m Julie Bogart.

    I’m a homeschooling alum -17 years, five kids. Now I run Brave Writer, the online writing and language arts program for families. More >>

    IMPORTANT: Please read our Privacy Policy.

  • New to Brave Writer? START HERE

  • FREE Resources

    • 7-Day Writing Blitz
    • Brave Writer Lifestyle Program
    • Brave Writer Sampler: Free Sample Products
    • Freewriting Prompts
    • Podcasts
  • Popular Posts

    • You have time
    • How writing is like sewing
    • Best curriculum for a 6 year old
    • Today's little unspoken homeschool secret
    • Do you like to homeschool?
    • Don't trust the schedule
    • You want to do a good job parenting?
    • If you've got a passel of kids
    • You are not a teacher
    • Natural Stages of Growth in Writing podcasts
  • Blog Topics

    • Brave Learner Home
    • Brave Writer Lifestyle
    • Classes
    • Contests/Giveaways
    • Friday Freewrite
    • High School
    • Homeschool Advice
    • Julie's Life
    • Language Arts
    • Movie Wednesday
    • Natural Stages of Growth
    • One Thing Principle
    • Our Team
    • Parenting
    • Philosophy of Education
    • Podcasts
    • Poetry Teatime
    • Products
    • Reviews
    • Speaking Schedule
    • Students
    • Writing about Writing
    • Young Writers
  • Archives

  • Brave Writer is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees (at no extra cost to you) by advertising and linking to amazon.com

    Content © Brave Writer unless otherwise stated.

What is Brave Writer?

  • Welcome to Brave Writer
  • Why Brave Writer Works
  • About Julie
  • Brave Writer Values
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Speaking Schedule

Brave Writer Program

  • Getting Started!
  • Stages of Growth in Writing
  • The Brave Writer Program
  • For Families and Students
  • Online Classes
  • Brave Writer Lifestyle

…and More!

  • Blog
  • Classroom
  • Store
  • Books in Brave Writer Programs
  • Contact Us
  • Customer Service
© 2025 Brave Writer
Privacy Policy
Children's Privacy Policy
Help Center