A Brave Writer's Life in Brief - Page 562 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

A little of this and that…

Hi everyone!

Great to have you all reading along. I removed the two posts that were here earlier this week (about the GHC and the Cincinnati convention in particular). The week is over, we’ve all had a chance to discuss what happened or may have happened, and I was able to answer some direct questions about my life and Brave Writer’s story. If you missed those posts and would like to read them, you may email me. Otherwise, let’s let the past be past and move forward into a happy future. I’ve loved all the incredible emails you’ve sent me. Some have brought me to tears.

This whole chain of events has led to many more opportunities to share about Brave Writer’s work too. Just yesterday I was in touch with the Homeschool Expo in BC (Canada, that is!). They called and I listened. I hope I can be a part of that great Northwest convention at some time in the future. I’ve had requests for articles, speaking, and general goodwill all around, so thank you for all of that.

The best way to help Brave Writer is to share about it with your homeschooling friends. I know you already do… so keep doing that. 🙂

More homeschool advice and writing help coming your way!

In the meantime, next week is a big one for us.

The new Jot It Down! Year Long Language Arts and Writing Program is set to release.

So excited about THAT!

If you want to get in on the first week discount, be sure you are receiving our Brave Writer Zipline—our email newsletter. You can sign up on the home page: Sign up for the Zipline.

Have a great weekend!

–Julie

Posted in General | Comments Off on A little of this and that…


Friday Freewrite: “Oh no you di-in’t”

Today’s freewrite requires you to “write against your viewpoint.”

So if you liked “Beauty and the Beast,” write as though you didn’t like it. Find evidence in the movie that would support not liking the film. If you hate pistachio pudding, write as though you love it! Works best with concrete experiences as opposed to “hating kindness” though feel free to try, if that floats your boat!

Posted in Friday Freewrite | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: “Oh no you di-in’t”


Mini Reports: We even do cookbooks!

By Christine Gable

Today’s blog is from one of our fabulous staff instructors: Christine Gable.
 
She’s the mastermind behind the Mini Reports class, where your kids learn to apply Brave Writer writing strategies to writing across the curriculum, or to their hobbies and interests. If you are looking for hand-holding and a tutorial feel for individual writing projects you want your kids to execute, Mini Reports is the way to go!
 
Sign up now as class starts MONDAY!
 
 
There’s nothing like a new journal. All those fresh smooth pages, that crisp paper. All the possibilities, the latent hope that whispers quietly when it’s first cracked open. My daughter loves new journals—she has a shelf above her desk with quite a few not-yet-written-in. A most recent gift-of-a-journal had a cupcake on the cover. It inspired her right away:

“Mom, I’m going to create a cookbook!”

She began by titling it and adding her name as author (an important and vital first step!). She then proceeded to look through our recipe box for a few favorite recipes to get started. First: a chocolate cupcake recipe. She sat down at the kitchen island to begin transcribing. I suggested that she might want to add a personal blurb (called a head-note) under the title. I explained that the head-note was a personal memory, anecdote or story that made the recipe special to the author or recipe developer. Sometimes it provided an alternative preparation tip or idea too.

“I like to read those in cookbooks, Mom! I didn’t know they were called head-notes. I think cookbooks are fun to read—especially when I’m eating something good.” (A-ha, just like her mom.)

She proceeded to work busily, copying two complete recipes into her new cookbook, until her hand felt crampy: “Recipes are hard to write … my hand is tired, I’m going to work on this later.” So we tucked away the new cookbook and proceeded to finish getting dinner ready together—a perfect segue.

She did work on the cookbook another time or two, but it eventually fell by the wayside. Recently it happened to be excavated from amongst a pile of creative beginnings: American Girl crafts, scrapbooking bits, Sharpie markers, beads and ribbons.

What had begun with enthusiasm and a spur-of-the-moment plan (create an entire cookbook) had petered out, lost to the many other attractive possibilities that present themselves in the course of a teen’s day. It was a project that began with a lot of energy that didn’t seem to last very long (from my adult view-point).

But here’s the thing I try to remember: I did this all the time as a kid (and still do sometimes, as an adult). And that’s okay. In fact, it’s vital to becoming a good writer. To be able to experiment, to try out different approaches and projects and characters, to “wet one’s feet” or “whet one’s appetite” (even briefly at times) is invaluable learning experience. You see, sometimes it’s just this initial outpouring, this primary rush that needs to be experienced. It’s important to keep in mind that not all projects need to be completed.

However, as adults and homeschooling parents, it’s pretty common knowledge that we like completed projects (dare I say?—love them). In order to get on the same page as our kids when expecting completion, it really helps to let kids know that we’d like a project to be taken through all the stages to completion. It helps set the stage for success (rather than having kids feel like we’re twisting their arm when they’re really feeling DONE).

Having an agreed-upon goal at the beginning of a writing project is an important first step of working together successfully on writing. Another important part of the equation is setting appropriate expectations for the project. That’s why Julie recommends undertaking no more than one original writing project during a four-week period. It’s also important to consider the size of the project.

While my daughter’s initial goal of filling the entire journal with recipes and creating an entire cookbook was admirable, it was so big that she lost steam. Setting a more manageable goal (say four or five recipes for a mini-size cookbook) would have meant accomplishing a sizable task toward the goal each time one complete recipe was transcribed. And that means that there will, most likely, be energy left over for adding photos or illustrations, for exploring fonts, colors and borders, and for creating a personal introduction along with a front and back cover.

This is exactly what kids do when they work on a cookbook project in the mini reports class. Just the word “mini” makes a cookbook project feel more manageable, doesn’t it? When we encourage kids to compete projects of attainable size, they end with a feeling of confidence and success. Best of all, there’s a completed project. Can’t ask for a better combination than that, eh?

Hannah Bates’ Cookbook is a cookbook project recently completed in the Mini Reports class. (Open the cookbook by clicking on the link.) I love helping kids work on projects like this! (There are 13 other formats in the Mini Reports class that kids can choose from also).

See you on April 30!

Posted in BW products, Mini Reports, Online Classes | Comments Off on Mini Reports: We even do cookbooks!


Poetry Teatime in Manly Australia and a Poem!

Send me photos! I love to share them from around the world. The first few are from Australia, and the last is a photo of a creative poem written by Heather’s daughter.
Dear Julie,
We live in Manly, Australia. We’re lucky to have an apartment near the harbour.
I’m feeling very positive about the Brave Writer ‘lifestyle’ and the boys certainly responded well to their first taste.
Sam Nimmo

Poetry Teatime

Poetry Teatime

Poetry Teatime

 

Hi Julie!

I am so excited to have found Brave Writer!  I feel encouraged and empowered to write with my kids 11 & 9 and scaffold them with your help.  Teatime is on my radar for this week along with Free Write.
I have figured out the “basics” and took an opportunity to write a found word poem using newspaper clippings with my 9 year old.
Thanks for your encouragement!
Heather

Clever, right? Play with words—good for your kids and good for you too!

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, Poetry, Poetry Teatime | 2 Comments »


Thinking Differently about Writing

The Paradigm Shift

Sometimes moms have a hard time wrapping their brains around Brave Writer. They ask questions like:

  • What grade levels is it for?
  • Do I need any other writing program if I use Brave Writer materials?
  • What do I do once I’ve worked through Growing Brave Writers? Do I go on to some other program or can I keep going with Brave Writer?
  • What’s the difference between the Arrow and Partnership Writing?

So with all the new visitors and emails flying into my in-box, I thought I’d take a moment to give you another way to think about Brave Writer.

Brave Writer requires a paradigm shift
in how you think about writing.

Like any paradigm shift, it feels “wrong” at first, even though you also feel drawn to it. Brave Writer is not about programmatic writing. It’s not organized by grade level. It’s organized by developmental stages of growth.

The reason you may feel flustered by Brave Writer is that it requires you to consider each individual child’s needs and then match the right products to him or her.

That’s a bigger challenge initially than clicking on “1st grade” and buying the 1st Grade Package. But the upside is this: we offer TONS of support (email, phone calls, and the membership community, Brave Learner Home) to ensure that you buy the right products for your particular family. Once you enter the world of Brave Writer, we take care of you and your kids. You have access to me (Julie Bogart) and my staff.

We teach YOU how to be a homeschooling parent and writing coach simultaneously without damaging your relationship with your child, as well as provide tools with processes and exercises to help you establish a writing process that is tailored to your unique child.

It’s not: “Write a descriptive paragraph, using a topic sentence, an ‘ly’ word for the second sentence, and a clincher for the last sentence.”

It is: “Delightful child of mine: you have so much to say. Let’s see how we can get that captured on paper in any way we can so that you and I can play with your ideas and thoughts, so we can expand them, enjoy them, and share them with others. Let’s discover all the cool, interesting thoughts inside you. I’m on your team and I have some tricks up my sleeve for how we can make writing comfortable, interesting, less taxing, more satisfying, and even enjoyable. You deserve that. Have a brownie.”

See how different that is? It helps you to execute ANY writing you do with your child, in any other curriculum you are already using. It’s the manual that tells you how to teach writing, not what to teach.

Can you feel the difference?

Brave Writer

Brave Writer products facilitate writing growth
through a specific set of ideas about writing.

Those ideas are:

  • When growing a writer, you want to match the level of support you offer to the developmental skills of your child. Help helps!
  • It’s essential to separate the mechanics of writing from the original writing voice in the early stage of development.
  • We use someone else’s writing to teach mechanics.
  • We capture the child’s original writing voice on paper, on screen for that child until the mechanics take hold.
  • The writing process is more important than writing formats, particularly in the early years.
  • Writing growth happens through a series of papers, not in every single paper.
  • Writing with freedom, support, and modeling creates space for kids to access/delve into their own language that reveals their natural insight, vocabulary, and passion.
  • Parents make the best coaches and allies to their children.
  • Any native speaker who reads and writes can be his or her child’s writing coach.
  • Creating emotional safety for writing risks is the single most important skill a parent must master to grow a writer.
  • A language rich environment is more important/effective than spelling, grammar, vocabulary, literature, and writing workbooks.
  • Poetry Teatime is the gateway drug to all things Brave Writer.

A wonderful side-effect is that it will make you a better homeschooling parent, period. The paradigm shift away from “school,” to “home” is profound. You’ll find that you are suddenly much more able to be there for your kids, valuing their quirky individuality, no matter how skilled or unskilled they are in academics. You’ll discover that you love hanging out with these little people and you’ll be startled by how their mind life delights and fascinates you (rather than worrying that they are behind).

In other words, Brave Writer’s paradigm shift speaks to the whole of how you home educate but uses writing as the primary lens through which you re-envision what it means to celebrate, nurture, love, and lead your fabulous little people.

The Brave Writer Philosophy

Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, Homeschool Advice, Language Arts, Writing Exercises, Young Writers | Comments Off on Thinking Differently about Writing


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