A Brave Writer's Life in Brief - Page 22 of 754 - Thoughts from my home to yours A Brave Writer's Life in Brief
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A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

Thoughts from my home to yours

Mutual Trust

Brave Writer Mutual Trust

What if…

  • you made a rule for yourself that said: “I will never assume my child is out to trick me”?
  • you heard a child’s complaints as useful information so you can solve a problem together?
  • your child’s unhappiness mattered more to you than your need to push that child through schoolwork?

Trust Goes Both Ways

Trust goes both ways only if it goes both ways. Can your child trust you to bring good things into their daily lives? Does your child trust that when they are bored, tired, annoyed, or unhappy those feelings matter to you?

You can still have objectives. But what happens to those objectives when we take our children’s experience seriously? Might we:

  • change the delivery system?
  • create different conditions for performing the task?
  • lend kind support or a sense of humor?

Our kids are not the problem.

Mutual trust is.

When we build mutual trust, we improve everyone’s life. Learn to be trustworthy by trusting that your children are not out to ruin the day, your homeschool, your family or your life. Meet them where they are so they can meet you where you are too.

Lather, rinse, repeat.


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


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Friday Freewrite: Thwarted

Friday Freewrite

Today’s freewriting prompt:

The word “thwarted” can mean to be prevented or stopped from doing something. Have you ever been thwarted? Write about your experience.


New to Freewriting?

Freewriting is that wonderful key that unlocks the writer within. It’s the vehicle by which we trick our inner selves into divesting the words and ideas that we want to share but are afraid won’t come out right on paper if we do. So, read the freewriting prompt, set the timer for 5-10 minutes then write whatever comes to mind. Just keep the pencil moving!

Need more help? Check out our free online guide.

Tags: Writing prompts
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[Podcast #255] Brave Writers Thriving in College

Brave Writer Podcast

As homeschooling parents, one of our biggest concerns is ensuring our children are ready for college when the time comes (if they choose that path). Today, we’re joined by Elizabeth Christie, homeschooling mom of six, who tells us about how her Brave Writers are now excelling in college.

Tune in to hear how:

  • Elizabeth’s kids sailed through college application essays,
  • her daughter was recruited to be a well-paid student writing tutor,
  • and her son has excelled as a technical writer. 

If you’ve ever wondered about the power of read-aloud time or chunk writing, this is the episode for you.

Show Notes

The Writing Tutor

When Elizabeth’s oldest started university, she was almost immediately recruited by professors to be a writing mentor for other students. They noted how she had a writing voice and knew how to use it. She agreed to take the position and is now a well-paid student tutor.

The Technical Writer

Elizabeth’s second oldest is very interested in computers. That doesn’t stop him from using his Brave Writer skills, though. He’s an accomplished technical writer.

Both of Elizabeth’s kids sailed through their college application essays without breaking a sweat. She anticipates her younger four children will also be competent and confident when their turn comes. She credits Brave Writer read-aloud time, chunk writing, and the beloved book reveals.

Resources

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Connect with Melissa

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Produced by NOVA Media

Brave Writer Podcast

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The Power of the Concept

Brave Writer

Are you struggling to achieve an idealistic version of home education?

Maybe “idealistic” is the wrong word. Perhaps we struggle with an unrealistic, inaccurate view of what homeschooling is. After all: the one key value that ought to be the minimum requirement is that what our kids learn is at least as interesting as watching Moana or playing in the woods.

Flip the Script

Provoke a new relationship to what your kids are learning!

For instance, if when teaching commas you start by breaking the rules, you give your kids a chance to experience the power of a comma. Try this:

  • Find a sentence with a comma then insert additional commas after every word.
  • Next, read aloud the sentence with all the extra commas.
  • As you or your child pauses each time there is a comma (even if it doesn’t make sense in the intonation), your child will begin to understand how and why we use commas at all!
  • Finally, read the original sentence with only the one, well-placed comma.
  • Your child will now have a felt sense of the power of a comma. It will be known, not just practiced for a worksheet.

A key question to ask yourself, then, is:

How can I demonstrate the POWER of this concept, idea, skill?

That will move you in the right direction. 


This post was originally shared on Instagram.
Watch the accompanying reel for more.


Brave Writer

Posted in Homeschool Advice | Comments Off on The Power of the Concept


Friday Freewrite: Superstitious

Friday Freewrite

Today’s freewriting prompt:

A definition of the word “superstitious” is believing that a certain thing will bring good luck (like finding a four-leaf clover) or bad luck (like walking under a ladder, breaking a mirror, or simply existing on Friday the 13th!). Are you superstitious? Why or why not?


New to Freewriting?

Freewriting is that wonderful key that unlocks the writer within. It’s the vehicle by which we trick our inner selves into divesting the words and ideas that we want to share but are afraid won’t come out right on paper if we do. So, read the freewriting prompt, set the timer for 5-10 minutes then write whatever comes to mind. Just keep the pencil moving!

Need more help? Check out our free online guide.

Tags: Writing prompts
Posted in Friday Freewrite | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: Superstitious


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