We All Have a Story to Tell
If you encourage young writers in your home or classroom, make space for them to tell stories out loud. Oral storytelling is an essential learning step towards writing our stories in words. It is often overlooked as a learning strategy, but we develop many essential writing skills whenever we share our ideas aloud.
Building Blocks
Just as the atom was considered the smallest building block of matter, so words are the building blocks of every sentence.
Curiosity’s Call
“Why???” This is the earliest question a child asks when they begin to build an awareness of the world around them. And what an important question it is! ‘Why’ invites us to wonder, anticipate outcomes, think more deeply, and make connections between what we already know and the mysterious things that are, as yet, beyond our understanding.
Hunting Down Ideas
Hunting down ideas is one way to catch ideas. Some days, ideas come easily. On other days, they are difficult to track down. This blog contains tips to stimulate your young writers’ brain to relinquish ideas in hiding.
Emotive Writing
Never underestimate the ability of a young writer to create stories full of deep emotional meaning. With guidance and encouragement from a caring adult, even the youngest writers can write to convey emotion.
Where Do Ideas Come From?
Any serious writer must ask themselves: How do authors recognize a good idea and then do something magical with it?
For the Love of Writing
At the very heart of writing are ideas. And at the very core of those ideas is the desire to write. Embedded in that desire to write is the need to tell our story. To be heard. To be truly known. This most fundamental human need to be known is the very crux of why writers write.