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A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

Thoughts from my home to yours

Add Olympic Fun to Your Homeschool

Add Olympic Fun to your Homeschool

The Brave Writer Guide
to the 2018 Winter Olympic Games

Whether you have a house full of winter Olympic sports fans, or you don’t know the difference between luge and bobsled, take heart! Brave Writer has you covered.

The Olympic games are ripe with learning opportunities that dovetail beautifully with the Brave Writer Lifestyle. From Poetry Teatime to art appreciation, nature study to movies, there is something for everyone when it comes to the world’s biggest sports extravaganza. We’ve got activities not only for sports lovers, but for your musicians, artists, and geography-whiz-kids too.

The XXIII Winter Olympic Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea kick off with the Opening Ceremonies on Friday, February 9, and continue through Sunday, February 25.

Add Olympic Fun to Your Homeschool

To enrich your fun during the games enjoy our book suggestions below then for many more Brave Writer Lifestyle-inspired ideas download our FREE guide. We’ve even included some Olympic-size big juicy conversation topics you can dig into with your teens!

Brave Writer Guide to the Winter Olympics


[This post contains Amazon affiliate links. When you click on those links to make purchases,
Brave Writer receives compensation at no extra cost to you. Thank you!]


Olympic titles for your morning basket

Fiction

Snowman Paul at the Winter Olympics by Yossi Lapid. 3–8 years.
Max and Marla by Alexandra Boiger. 3–5 years.
Tacky and the Winter Games by Helen Lester. 4–7 years.
Olympig! by Victoria Jamieson. 5–8 years.

Nonfiction

Yes, I Can!: The Story of the Jamaican Bobsled Team by Devon Harris. 6–9 years.
Kid’s Guide to the 2018 WInter Games by Jack L. Roberts.
The Treasures of the Olympic Winter Games by The Olympic Museum & IOC.
TIME-LIFE The Olympics: Moments That Made History by Time Life.
Freeze Frame: A Photographic History of the Winter Olympics by Sue Macy.

Poetry

G is for Gold Medal: An Olympics Alphabet by Brad Herzog. 6–9 years.
Goodnight Hockey by Michael Dahl. 4–7 years.
A is for Axel: An Ice Skating Alphabet by Kurt Browning. 6–9 years.

Also look for books about specific sports that grab the attention of your young Olympic enthusiasts!


As you explore these ideas, we’d love to see your Olympic creativity at work! If you’re incorporating the Olympics into your homeschool, post photos on social media with the hashtag #2018bwl so we can share in the fun!

Let the games begin!

Posted in Activities | Comments Off on Add Olympic Fun to Your Homeschool


Brave Writer Lifestyle: TV and Film

Brave Writer Lifestyle: TV and Film

We’re focusing on TV and Film in February!

This month is all about movies and TV. Good thing because I’ll be holed up in front of my television, eating out of a box for the two weeks of the Olympics! Won’t you?

We’ll be discussing this month’s theme on Instagram and in the Homeschool Alliance, and I’ll likely share on Facebook Live too.

For regular encouragement as you implement the elements in your home this year, sign up for our monthly BWL email (sent on the 1st of every month in 2018). This month’s newsletter includes these FREE downloadable resources:

  • Hand-lettered Tips
  • Brave Writer Goes to the Movies
  • Brave Writer Guide to the 2018 Winter Olympics

Also if you need family movie night suggestions, complete with discussion questions and helpful resources, check out our Master List of Movie Wednesday posts here on the Brave Writer blog!

For more information about the Brave Writer Lifestyle, check out this part of our website


2018 Themes

January: Read Aloud
February: TV & Film
March: Big, Juicy Conversations
April: Poetry Teatime
May: Art Appreciation
June: Nature Journaling
July: One on One Time
August: Language Games
September: Copywork
October: Freewriting
November: Shakespeare
December: Celebrate!


Brave Writer Calendar

It’s also not too late to grab our lovely 2018 Brave Writer Lifestyle Calendar. It will give you a place to record your activities, which child did what, and to make plans for field trips, and more!


Share, share, share!

We’d love it if you shared your Brave Writer Lifestyle adventures on Instagram, the BraveSchoolers Facebook Group, in the Homeschool Alliance, or wherever you hang out online.

#2018BWL

Posted in Brave Writer Lifestyle | Comments Off on Brave Writer Lifestyle: TV and Film


Movie Wednesday Master List

Movie Wednesday Master List

A big part of the Brave Writer Lifestyle is creating a language rich environment using movies and television. Below you will find a list of blog posts all about movies that include

  • summaries,
  • discussion questions,
  • and additional resources.

Also included in the list are links to any Arrows and Boomerangs (literature-based language arts guides) that correspond to film adaptations.


Brave Writer Guide to the Movies

Grab Brave Writer’s FREE Movie Discussion Guide!

Our 11 page digital guide helps you to comment meaningfully on plot, characterization, make-up and costumes, acting, setting and even film editing. It gives you the background and a series of questions to help your kids discuss movies on a deeper level, rather than the usual “It was really good…” responses they offer.


Master List of Movie Wednesday Blog Posts

  • Annie – Rated: PG
  • Back to the Future – Rated: PG
  • Beauty and the Beast – Rated: PG
  • Because of Winn-Dixie – Rated: PG – Arrow
  • BFG, The – Rated: PG
  • Book Thief, The – Rated: PG-13 – Boomerang
  • Bridge to Terabithia, The – Rated: PG
  • Charlotte’s Web – Rated: G – Dart
  • Christmas Carol, A – Rated: TV-PG – Boomerang
  • Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs – Rated: PG
  • Coco – Rated: PG
  • Darkest Minds, The – Rated: PG-13
  • Doctor Who – Rated: TV-PG
  • Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them – Rated: PG-13
  • Fault in Our Stars, The – Rated: PG-13 – Boomerang
  • Frozen – Rated: PG
  • Fullmetal Alchemist – TV-14
  • Great Gatsby, The – Rated PG-13 – Slingshot
  • Hidden Figures – Rated: PG – Boomerang (available February 1, 2022)
  • Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, The – Rated: PG – Boomerang
  • Hobbit, The – Rated: PG-13 – Boomerang
  • Hound of the Baskervilles, The – Rated: NR (recommended age: 10+) – Boomerang
  • Howl’s Moving Castle – Rated: PG
  • Hunger Games, The – Rated: PG-13 – Boomerang
  • Ice Girls – Rated: PG
  • Inside Out – Rated: PG
  • It’s a Wonderful Life – Rated: PG
  • James and the Giant Peach – Rated: PG
  • Jane Eyre – Rated: PG-13 – Slingshot
  • Kubo and the Two Strings – Rated: PG
  • Lagaan – Rated: PG
  • Little Women – Rated: PG – Boomerang
  • Maleficent – Rated: PG
  • Mary Poppins – Rated: G – Arrow
  • Moana – Rated: PG
  • Mr. Popper’s Penguins – Rated: PG – Dart
  • Next Gen – Rated: TV-PG
  • Paddington Bear – Rated: PG
  • Penelope – Rated: PG
  • Phantom of the Opera, The – PG-13
  • Planet of the Apes – Rated: G, PG
  • Princess Bride, The – Rated: PG – Boomerang
  • Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl – Rated: PG-13
  • Romeo and Juliet – Rated: PG-13
  • Scarlet Pimpernel, The – Rated: NR – Boomerang
  • Sense and Sensibility – Rated: PG – Boomerang
  • Series of Unfortunate Events, A – Rated: TV-PG, PG – Arrow
  • Star Trek Into Darkness and The Wrath of Khan – Rated: PG-13, PG
  • Star Wars – Rated: PG, PG-13
  • Sword in the Stone, The – Rated: G
  • To Kill a Mockingbird – Rated: NR (recommended age 12+) – Boomerang
  • Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory – Rated: G
  • Wizard of Oz, The – Rated: PG – Boomerang

Brave Writer’s Movie Discussion Club

Your kids will be so excited about movies,
they’ll hardly notice they are writing!


Movie Discussion Club

Posted in Wednesday Movies | Comments Off on Movie Wednesday Master List


Movie Wednesday: Star Wars

Movie Wednesday Star Wars

by Amy Frantz, Brave Writer alum

Up above the desert Outer Rim planet of Tatooine, a desperate battle rages between the evil Galactic Empire and the Rebellion who oppose them. But down on the planet’s surface, Luke Skywalker lives on a quiet moisture farm with his over-protective uncle and aunt where nothing interesting or exciting ever seems to happen. At least, not to Luke. But all that changes one day when Luke’s uncle purchases two new droids to work on the farm and one of the mechanical helpers claims to be on a secret mission from the Rebellion to find the mysterious Jedi Knight, Obi-Wan Kenobi. Luke must choose between the mundane but safe life he’s always known or the mantle of a hero destined to fight against evil in the galaxy.


[This post contains Amazon affiliate links. When you click on those links to make purchases,
Brave Writer receives compensation at no extra cost to you. Thank you!]


“A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away…” might be one of the most famous openings to a film in cinematic history, but back in the 1970s before the first Star Wars film was released, there was no guarantee that George Lucas’ audacious space opera would make any money, let alone revolutionize the way people thought about movies forever. Beset with on location difficulties (rain and sand storms, oh my!), budget issues, a hefty bit of scorn from the higher ups at the studio, and starring three relative unknowns in the leading roles, Lucas’ space epic, inspired by the stories of his own youth, might have seemed doomed to failure.

Yet despite all this, Star Wars (which would later be renamed “Episode IV: A New Hope”) made record breaking amounts of money at the box office and kick-started an unprecedented level of fan hysteria which continues to this day (for proof one need only look at the latest installment of the franchise, The Last Jedi, which to date has made over $1.3 billion and has been nominated for four Oscars). Fans were lining up around the block to see this movie! People were connecting with this strange yet familiar fairy tale in space, with its hopeful messages and its princesses and scoundrels and farm boys fighting against galactic monolithic evil.

Two more films (The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi) were released in 1980 and 1983, completing what is now referred to as the original trilogy. In 1999, The Phantom Menace was released as the first film in the prequel trilogy (followed by 2002’s Attack of the Clones and 2005’s Revenge of the Sith), which follows events in the life of Luke’s father. In 2012, George Lucas sold Lucasfilm, along with the rights to the Star Wars franchise, to Disney who in turn launched their own series of films (The Force Awakens, 2015. Rogue One, 2016. The Last Jedi, 2017) following new sets of characters and centering female protagonists.

Amidst all the hype nowadays, it might be easy to forget that Star Wars began as one man’s passion project. Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford, and the late Carrie Fisher might be household names now, but back in the ’70s almost no one knew who they were. Today Star Wars has been branded across the collective consciousness as a true cinematic phenomenon, but its humble origins are still important to remember.

So, travel back to the cinema of the ’70s, turn down the lights, make some popcorn, and experience the beginning of the Star Wars Saga whether for the hundredth or the very first time!

A note to parents: Although all three original trilogy films and the first two prequels are rated PG, Revenge of the Sith, Rogue One, The Force Awakens, and The Last Jedi are all rated PG-13. Revenge of the Sith in particular contains disturbing themes and imagery. We recommend looking up the films on sites like Common Sense Media before deciding if they are right for your family.

Discussion Questions

  • One of the most distinguishing features of the Star Wars films are their soundtracks composed and conducted by John Williams, who has himself become a fixture of the film industry. Do you have a favorite musical moment from the first film and how do you think the film might change if it were scored differently?
  • R2-D2 and C-3P0 are bought and sold at the beginning of the film and are later banned from the cantina for being droids. Do you think it’s okay to treat artificial forms of intelligence this way? Why or why not?
  • After the destruction of her home planet, we don’t see Princess Leia work through this colossal loss on screen, however the film spends whole scenes with Luke dealing with the loss of his family and later “Ben” Kenobi. Why do you think this is and how do you feel about it?
  • George Lucas stirred up controversy years after the release of Star Wars by creating “special editions” of the original trilogy films with updated special effects and some deleted scenes put back in. Do you think it’s a filmmaker’s right to alter their own creations or should a film be left alone once it has been released and never be altered? Explain your answer.
  • If you have seen the other films in the saga, how do you think the first film holds up to them?
  • Do you have a favorite film in the saga? Which one and why?

Additional Resources

StarWars.com – the official website

The Star Wars Show – go behind the scenes with the latest additions to the franchise with news and interviews

DIY Death Star Nightlight (flashing lights warning)

Movie Discussion Club

Posted in Wednesday Movies | Comments Off on Movie Wednesday: Star Wars


Friday Freewrite: Emphasis

Friday Freewrite Emphasis

Complete the sentence: “I didn’t say that ____________.”

Write it multiple times. The first time emphasize the first word, the second time emphasize the second word, and keep going until you’ve emphasized all the words in the sentence (“I didn’t say that…” I DIDN’T say that…” “I didn’t SAY that…”).

Now read the sentences aloud and see how the meaning may change!

New to freewriting? Check out our online guide.

Posted in Friday Freewrite | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: Emphasis


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