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A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

Thoughts from my home to yours

5 Ways to Encourage Reading

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Sometimes you love to read, your kids love to hear you read, and the whole family walks around with a nose in a book or up against the screen of a Kindle. But maybe your family has a kid or two or three who finds the work of reading a deterrent to actually doing it. They love stories—books on CD, movies, cartoons. They may enjoy comic books. But the sustained effort to read a novel is challenging. And being the conscientious wonderful parent that you are, you are now worried. What to do!

I have a few tips today to offer you. Feel free to add more in the comments.

1) Create a cozy reading space.
Hidey-holes are particularly popular. Pick a corner of a room where people are (no isolated space gets used in a homeschool family so make this space a part of the family activity), prop a pillow or two up against the wall and place one on the floor (a bean bag chair works too, or a futon). Next to the floor-level cushiony space, situate a basket with books in it (tempting ones, a range – fiction, non-fiction, short, long, easy, challenging). Next to the basket, add a small low table with a lamp on it. Or alternatively (to “up the cool factor”), put a clip light in the basket for the child to attach to the book itself to provide lighting. Be sure (if it’s winter where you are) to add a cozy blanket to snuggle under. Specify that the corner is for reading, not for any other activity. Any child may go there any time he or she wants to read, even if only for a couple of minutes. (In big families, you may need several hidey-holes—don’t forget hidey-holes under tables or near fireplaces or behind sofas, too.)

2) Write personal notes in the book that the child is going to read.
My daughter does this for siblings when she loans a book. She writes notes at particular moments in the story in the margins for the sibling to read. These might be comments like “Bet you didn’t see that coming!” or “Isn’t so-and-so a jerk?” or “Tell me when you get to this chapter so we can discuss. It’s so infuriating!” Knowing that these notes are in the margins waiting to be discovered can help a child sustain attention to keep reading just so he or she can see what you wanted to say to him or her.

3) Light a candle for “reading time.”
Everyone in the family reads while the candle is lit. Start with 5 minutes of silent, family reading and build over a period of weeks to 15 or 20. During the “reading time,” no one will get up to get a glass of juice or a snack for a sibling or child. No one will pull out the Legos and build a fort (unless you have some pre-readers who need to do something while everyone reads). When the candle is extinguished, reading time is over, talking and noise resume.

4) My mom’s tip for reading worked wonderfully for my siblings and me.
She sent us to bed at whatever bedtime was the current one. But she always told us we could stay up as late as we liked as long as we were reading in bed. This strategy had two benefits. First, we found ourselves reading every night because, in part, it meant we got to stay up late. Second, we wanted to go to bed to read to find out what happened after we fell asleep with the light on the night before—it made the whole “getting to bed” routine much less of a big deal and it turned all of us into readers!

5) Go to the library on a regular basis.
Even if you have digital books aplenty, there is something about walking through the stacks and getting to pick out your own books that makes the library a fabulous incentive for reading. Don’t worry if your child picks books and doesn’t read them or doesn’t finish them. The accumulation of information, language, and story from repeated visits, paging through books, reading some, ignoring others, will generate more reading later. Only good can come of it!

Posted in Brave Writer Lifestyle, Brave Writer Philosophy, Language Arts, Living Literature, Reading | 3 Comments »


Linky-links!

In tooling around the net this morning, I came across a few bloggers who are posting some wonderful stuff for homeschool. Thought I’d give them a little love and link back to them here:

If you are interested in quilting, you can’t get more inspired than by the stunning colors of this lovely quilt from Life on Prince Edward Island.

To go with my podcast about One Thing at a time, I found this terrific list of ways to get OUT of the house in winter (winter field trips!) from Upside Down Homeschool.

My favorite blog for the new year is not about homeschooling but about mindful living. Becoming Minimalist is helping me to declutter my life in 2013. Sometimes we need to remember to declutter our time commitments, not just our flat surfaces!
Not More, Better

Daily Yellow mirrors our practice of Freewriting Prompts, but offers ideas for free-art practice! Here’s how she puts it:

“Prompt6ix is a weekly set of six words or phrases to interpret as an art journal page, a collage, an art quilt, a piece of mail art, an artist trading card, even a poem for this low intensity challenge. Each prompt will include at least one color and one “technique” or method as well as words or phrases to inspire your work.”

Hope you get some new inspiration for your life by clicking around and picking ONE THING to try. 🙂 Don’t overdo it!

Posted in Brave Writer Lifestyle, Linky-links | 3 Comments »


Friday Freewrite: Proud of me

Write about a time when you took pride in something you’ve done: a generous act, a performance, a clutch moment in a sporting event, mastery of a particular subject area, conquering a goal. Or simply write about what you are proud of—as many things as you can think of. Go!

Posted in Friday Freewrite | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: Proud of me


Essay-writing, not Lecture-giving

Today’s writing tip:

As I comment on essay topics in the Brave Writer Classroom, I’m struck by context. It’s easy to get sidetracked into “advice-giving” rather than “essay-writing.” There’s a difference between explaining why you, the reader, should exercise, versus explaining the role of exercise in improved health. Many of our kids are used to lectures, sermons, and mini-lessons designed to urge them to be better people. They internalize this voice and then they mimic it in their essays. But that kind of writing is *not* appropriate for essay writing. Essays are the dispassionate explication of information and how various strands of detail correlate to prove a thesis—a risky proposition, an assertion.

If your student writes about what the reader should do, or directs any comments at the second person, “you,” know that that student has shifted from essay writing to sermon giving. Even without the “you,” if implicit in the writing is a list of “smart practices” or “good ideas,” know that your student is not writing an essay.

We had a question on Facebook:

Any specific tips for redirecting them to essay writing?

My answer:

Yes. Ask them to change the voice of the essay: Move from “you” to third person. Focus on content, not on practice. For instance, in the example of exercise:

Don’t write—

People should work out three to five times per week to get their hearts to beat faster. You won’t be as vulnerable to heart disease if you do cardiovascular exercise on a regular basis.

Write—

Regular cardiovascular exercise has been shown to prevent heart disease. People who work out three to five times per week reduce their chances of heart disease by X%.

See the difference in tone? Feel it? That’s what you’re going for.

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, General, Help for High School, Tips for Teen Writers | 7 Comments »


Podcast: One Thing Principle

One Thing Principle Podcast


I’ve written about the One Thing Principle many times. In this Brave Writer podcast, though, I wanted to share with you in more detail about how to get that fantasy homeschool you imagine into the real world of your routine family practice.

Noah shares about our family and what we did that he remembers and I am hoping that my comments will ease some of the frustration and doubt that get in the way of enjoying your time at home with your kids.


Don’t miss an episode! 

Sign up to receive podcast notifications.

Posted in One Thing, Podcasts | 9 Comments »


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