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A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

Thoughts from my home to yours

Poetry Teatime: Brownies are great!

Poetry Teatime: Brownies are Great!

Brave Writer mom, Elizabeth, shared her son’s poem on an image of their teatime! The poem goes:

Brownies are great!

Guess how many I ate?

They taste like chocolate cake

that Mom freshly baked.

So good!

Poetry Teatime

Posted in Poetry Teatime | Comments Off on Poetry Teatime: Brownies are great!


Prepare Thyself

10 Ways to Take Advantage of the Holidays in Your Homeschool

The holidays are upon us. The tendency is to brace oneself for the onslaught of spending, relatives, too much food, and the pressure to make “perfect memories for the children.”

Pause.

Appreciate the good you’ve already got going.

Traditions matter, but they also snowball if you let them! Pick the 3-5 that are especially important. Do those. Other “experiences” from previous years can be rotated out this season or delegated to another family member.

Homeschool might include some of these practices:

1. Bake and learn to write recipes.

2. Spend a day raking leaves and hanging lights.

3. Gift lists are ideal for handwriting practice.

4. Poetry Teatimes can include holiday songs.

5. Take advantage of shopping and sales to make math more practical and applicable to daily life.

6. Go on a little world (aka geography, history!) tour for holiday traditions from other parts of the globe can add new interest to tired local customs too.

7. Calculate the possible speeds and distances Santa must travel.

8. Create a family tree so that your kids know who is sending what cards and gifts and how they are related.

9. Build in a movie night so you can watch a time-honored holiday film together.

10. Hike! Tis the season! Get out in nature while it is still crisp, clear, and colorful.

The rhythm of homeschool changes around the holidays—use that to your advantage. January, with all its academic promise, is right around the corner. Give in to the holiday enthusiasm and bend it to your homeschool will.

Prepare thyself for a lovely season of learning and joy.

Tags: holiday homeschooling
Posted in Activities, Homeschool Advice | Comments Off on Prepare Thyself


Friday Freewrite: Permission slip

Friday Freewrite: Permission Slip

Julie at Creekside Learning shared this “Official Writer’s Permission Slip” with us from Spilling Ink: A Young Writer’s Handbook by Anne Mazer and Ellen Porter. Use it for today’s freewriting prompt!

New to freewriting? Check out our online guide.

Posted in Friday Freewrite | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: Permission slip


Woo-hoo! The 2015/16 winter class schedule is here!

Brave Writer online class schedule for winter 2015-16

BRAND NEW
Winter Writing Class Schedule
is now posted!

What makes Brave Writer’s online classes special?

  • Your kids will be writing in the company of other young writers!
  • Feedback is not only about “accuracy,” but writing voice–finding and fostering the child’s natural self-expression while expanding it and enhancing it!
  • Our classes are a deep-dive for 3-6 weeks, and then you all get to take a good long break before writing again.
  • Instruction is directed to parents, not just kids! We want to help you be the effective writing coach and ally your kids need, and the sort you want to become!
  • You can sign in any time of day from anywhere in the world and not miss a lick of class! All instruction is asynchronous while taught by a real instructor.
  • Our teaching staff are published writers and home educators–they know the dynamics of teaching their own kids to write, which is one reason they are so helpful!

So mark your calendars! You’ll want to sign up early to secure your space. Our classes for fall have been filling up in advance!

Registration OPENS on MONDAY December 7, at Noon EST

Tags: teach writing
Posted in Online Classes | Comments Off on Woo-hoo! The 2015/16 winter class schedule is here!


The Georgian Theatre Royal

Georgian Theatre Royal

The Georgian Theatre Royal

by Finlay Worrallo

In the heart of England, in the Yorkshire Dales, amid the shops and supermarkets of Richmond, lies the Georgian Theatre Royal. It doesn’t look much: a small building between a hotel and a pub, hemmed in by a chemist and a bakery on the other side. But creep down the cobbled alleyway and heave open the solid stage doors… and wonders are waiting inside.

The soft, black curtains swish around the sturdy planks of the stage, which creak as actors step on them. There is a constant hush around the dark corners behind the curtains; the air is thick with the smells of dust and excitement.

Deep in the theatre’s belly there is row upon row of exotic costumes. Coarse fake beards that have tickled a hundred chins; strange felt hats, pointing forward like giant ravens’ beaks; billowing capes of crimson with mysterious designs stitched into them; dresses that went out of fashion two hundred years ago. I’ve worn green and yellow waistcoats that clash spectacularly under the spotlights, and bright blue trousers with golden rosettes sewn on.

It’s crowded behind the curtains and uncomfortable when you’re jostling for space with half a dozen other actors. It’s not much better in the dressing rooms – every surface is strewn with clothes and scripts, and there’s usually only a couple of chairs. The floor gets saturated whenever it rains, and the lights overheat if left on too long. It’s a battered old building, it’s true, but within it we can create entire worlds that last for a few hours at a time, then burst like soap bubbles.

High in the rafters, countless beams and metal poles illuminate me with their glaring lights. The audience is a sea of unpredictable darkness. Will they laugh at the jokes? Will they sit in silence? I feel tiny on stage, someone else’s words on my lips – but then they laugh and I feel like a giant again.

I’m thirteen. I’m standing in a pool of blue light, dressed in black, eyes filled with defiance in the face of defeat. I raise my arm as I deliver my monologue. The audience is silent, but I can feel hairs standing on end. It’s an electric moment.

I’m fourteen. I’m bursting with adrenaline, as I’ve just kicked another boy to death. The other characters stare at me, appalled, but I don’t care. Fifty seconds later and I hit the ground myself, the hero’s knife in my stomach. There is silence.

I’m fifteen. I’m in a crowd of international teenagers in white and red – we’re chess pieces. And we’re dancing. Left, right, forwards, backwards, hands thrust up to the ceiling, shimmying and spinning and loving every second, music bursting all around us.

I’m sixteen. I’m dressed in a seventeenth-century coat, mostly hidden by a bright red tabard that makes me look like a playing card. I draw my sword and snarl an insult. Three heartbeats later and I’m in the centre of a bloody duel. All of my comrades fall and I have to dash off stage, hat and dignity both gone. Why do the heroes always win?

It’s addictive – the thrill, the nerves, the glory of holding an audience spellbound. Come into our world, we say, conjuring realms in our wooden O. Quite simply, it’s magic.

This is a place where anything can happen. If you have the patience to sit upon the unforgiving hard seats for a few hours, magic will unfold before your eyes.

At the Georgian Theatre Royal, everyone is ever so slightly mad – but it’s a place where everyone is accepted. This is a place where I belong.

Image by slgckgc (cc cropped, palette knife, text added)

Tags: theatre
Posted in Brave Writer Lifestyle, Students | Comments Off on The Georgian Theatre Royal


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