literature – Home School Innovation https://homeschoolinnovation.com Tips, Tactics and Techniques to Help You Find Your Homeschool Groove! Tue, 24 Apr 2018 20:40:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.3 https://homeschoolinnovation.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/cropped-Home-School-Innovation-2-32x32.png literature – Home School Innovation https://homeschoolinnovation.com 32 32 29323527 Supporting Young Writers in Your Homeschool With Great Literature https://homeschoolinnovation.com/blog/supporting-young-writers-in-your-homeschool-with-great-literature/ https://homeschoolinnovation.com/blog/supporting-young-writers-in-your-homeschool-with-great-literature/#respond Mon, 09 May 2016 10:00:43 +0000 https://homeschoolinnovation.com/?p=3499 *This post contains affiliate links to a curriculum we use in our home school. See disclosure policy for full details. Are you and your kids tired of the same old writing drills? Do your homeschool bookshelves house more than three types of writing curriculum? Writing, even if you feel you are quite good at it yourself, can be one of those subjects you find hard to teach in your homeschool. Why? Because, we tend to automatically recall and implement techniques from when we were in school. Think back to all the creative writing assignments, ugh! I enjoyed using my imagination,

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*This post contains affiliate links to a curriculum we use in our home school. See disclosure policy for full details.

Are you and your kids tired of the same old writing drills?

Do your homeschool bookshelves house more than three types of writing curriculum?

Writing, even if you feel you are quite good at it yourself, can be one of those subjects you find hard to teach in your homeschool.

Why?

Because, we tend to automatically recall and implement techniques from when we were in school.

Think back to all the creative writing assignments, ugh!

I enjoyed using my imagination, but often felt too much pressure when it came time to writing it all down.  Now that I have matured, I recognize that I didn’t dislike writing; I just felt stifled.  Stifled by correct grammar, spelling, and use of literary concepts that felt cold and mechanical.

All the excitement and fun of my story was held hostage to criteria and outlines; and that dreaded red pen.


Writing with Literature

 

Yes, we need to learn the mechanics of writing, but I also believe we need to enjoy the process.  Writing is something we all use every single day and it shouldn’t be something we dread doing.

So, how can we make some of those writing curricula work for us?

How can we make writing more exciting for our kids?

We need to get creative and not be weighed down by the curriculum.  We need to explore and read great literature to them.

Consider addressing writing lessons in a personal, fun and/or real way.  Find a way to have your child connect to what they want to write.

 

Homeschool Writing Lessons

Make it Fun!

Any chance I get, I use books and novels to drive home my point about certain literary devices. No pens, no paper; just me, my kids and books!

As and example, the other day we were discussing how we need to think of our readers.  How can we engage them and make them want to read what we write?  How do we hook them?

Instead of pulling out our curriculum, which does discuss and teach this through examples and practice, I decided to change things up. I zipped around our house and pulled a book off every shelf, and added the library books we just brought home.

I read the opening paragraph or two from every book.  We discussed it, I encouraged them to share with me what they really thought, in their own words! They need to know they can express their opinion, so I asked them questions like:

  • What do you know so far?
  • Does it capture you?
  • Can you guess what the book will be about?
  • Do you want to read more?
  • What intrigues you, what do you want answered?
  • Did it take you to another place?
  • Could you understand the vocabulary?
  • How long do you think it will take before you are captivated enough to keep reading?
  • Do you like it?
  • Did your imagination kick in?
  • Which of your senses were engaged?
  • etc.

(In case you are wondering, Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White won by a landslide!)

 

Make It Personal!

What stories and books really connect with your kids?  It can be a new novel or something you’ve read before and want to re-visit.  As you read use sticky tabs to mark passages of text to discuss or dissect later.  Ask lots of questions and get a discussion going.

  • What do you think about this character?
  • Who do you think the hero of the story is?
  • Would you have done the same thing?
  • Is this person being a good friend?
  • Do you see yourself in any of these characters?
  • How would you have handled this situation?
  • When is it right to … or is it wrong?
  • Can you picture yourself in this setting?
  • What do you think they feel right now?
  • Can you think of a situation in real life that could relate?
  • Imagine if the author didn’t use these exciting descriptive sentences, would you still like the book?

 

Make it Real!

Use real writing examples from novels they love and passages that take your breath away or send you off to some far off land.  Talk about why it captures your child’s imagination the way it does.  Use it as copywork and take the time to point out some literary devices the author is using; or highlight the different clauses within that particular paragraph.

Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we all had a copywork journal full of  passages from great novels or poems? Not a novel or poem that I love or you love, but one your child loves and identifies with!

This could be a great keepsake as well; all the while teaching them something about good writing practice. By the time they graduate they could have a little portfolio of the novels they read and loved over the years; with passages that meant something to them at that time in their life.

By diving deeper into the novels we read together, it provides us with an opportunity to learn much more about ourselves.  It also helps us to understand what good writing is and what it can become for us. It helps us to discover our writing voices.

Take the opportunity to have fun with words, explore and stretch your imagination!  Help your kids fall in love with writing not because it is part of a curriculum, but because beyond it being an essential skill, it is a beautiful way to communicate. 

Don’t be afraid to use a curriculum, but do be wary of becoming a slave to your writing curriculum.

Take a detour, step outside the box from time to time; push the curriculum aside, and just fall in love with great writers!

 

If you want more ideas on how to have discussions or ways to engage your learners with process questions check out “How I Teach Critical Thinking in Our Homeschool”

Want to know what great books we have been Reading? Here is some of our Reading List.

 

This post is part of a “How to Teach Without a Curriculum”  link up at iHomeschool Network

Click on the picture below to find other “How to Teach Without a Curriculum” posts:

Homeschooling without curriculum

 

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How to Start Homeschooling https://homeschoolinnovation.com/how-to-start/how-to-start-homeschooling/ https://homeschoolinnovation.com/how-to-start/how-to-start-homeschooling/#respond Wed, 16 Nov 2011 19:21:02 +0000 https://homeschoolinnovation.com/?p=38 There are so many questions that come flooding to your mind once you have decided to start homeschool. Let me assure you that it can be so much easier to start homeschooling than you might think. First Things First First item of business is the paper work end of things.  Find out what your local requirements are, every province or state will have their own guidelines to follow.  A great resource is Home School Legal Defense (HSLDA).  They have an office in both Canada and the United States and are an invaluable resource for our homeschooling communities. The Fun Begins

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There are so many questions that come flooding to your mind once you have decided to start homeschool.

Let me assure you that it can be so much easier to start homeschooling than you might think.

First Things First

First item of business is the paper work end of things.  Find out what your local requirements are, every province or state will have their own guidelines to follow.  A great resource is Home School Legal Defense (HSLDA).  They have an office in both Canada and the United States and are an invaluable resource for our homeschooling communities.

The Fun Begins (please remember to have fun)

Next  there is the practical side of things and could easily be called “how do I start teaching at home?”.   Based on my experience and the experience of many other homeschooling moms, I’d like to suggest you adjust your thoughts on the  ‘teaching at home mentality’.  After all we are our children’s parents, we have been teaching them since the moment they were born.   From day one we have been guiding, mentoring, and mediating them.  Although this will evolve through time as they mature, we are parents forever and we will always be there to support and guide our children.  Yes,  we are teaching them, but not in the same sense of how things are done at a school.  Don’t let yourself get in the way of  the natural process of learning,  be sure to support your child(ren)’s natural desire to learn, encourage and challenge their inquisitive nature.

From the moment you hold your newborn baby you became their mother or father but also their ‘teacher’.  Children are natural learners, seekers of information, masters of asking questions.  Take that innate natural thirst for knowledge and provide it with great books, great literature, engaging discussions, real life experience,  field trips, fun hands on activities, a pencil and paper,  and most importantly your love and guidance and you have just lit a fire for more knowledge.  The cycle will continue and they will want more and the fire will grow.

There are many methods to homeschooling, many curricula, many free resources and many different ways to schedule your days.  At the end of the day…or beginning of the day, you just have to start.

How to Start

Find a great novel to read aloud and interact with your children as you read.  Youngsters can draw pictures about the story, older children can narrate it back to you orally.   Engage with them and pull them into what was read, encourage them to really give you an opinion and avoid the dry and typical ‘reading comprehension’ type of questions.   You will be amazed where this type of interaction will lead; their minds will open and their eyes will light up!  You will start to find your family’s way and you will see your children’s strengths.   Sit back,  let it happen and soon you will start to understand how each of them process information or how they like to learn.  Once you reach this point, that is when you can start to figure out what method will work for your family or what resources will best suit each child.

  1. Find a great novel appropriate for the entire family.
  2. Let them draw about what is being read as you read to them.
  3. Engage your children, encourage opinions and discussion
  4. Break away from typical “reading comprehension” questions.
  5. Share some of your opinions in forms of questions like:  “Do you think…?”

I use a variety of resources, but our staple is great literature paired with a solid math program.  Family read-a-louds and discussions have always made our days better, whether it be done at the start, middle, or end of our day.   It is our comfort, our refresher, and our time to just be.

There is nothing better than to be snuggled up together reading and being so caught up in the moment that everyone forgets they are learning.  The ‘fire’ for knowledge quietly builds, the family bond strengthens and the confidence grows in those moments.

These are the moments that last and give each of us our foundation.

So take a deep breath, quiet your mind, pick up that great piece of literature and just start.  Start building that fire and start homeschooling.

 

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