We're getting ready to start a new academic year at the end of the month, and are taking a mishmash approach to language arts. It blends
the Brave Writer Lifestyle with some great tools I have compiled, and I think it will work well for us.
So, here's the WRITING plan...
Each day (Monday through Thursday anyway), we'll start with a rotating focus, with both kids and I working together (a lot of this will be oral work, a little more so than written).
Mondays (our short day due to my college schedule) will be for poetry. Now, I have not quite decided yet if I want to use a poetry teaching resource (
Rose, Where Did You Get That Red?, or
Knock at a Star: A Child's Introduction to Poetry, or ???)
OR if I simply want to introduce the kids to poets and go for the full
poetry teatime experience. Hmmm. This will be followed by
free writing for both (just 10-15 minutes). The Boy will be using
Unjournaling for ideas when needed, while The Girl and I are embarking on a year-long adventure (see below).
Tuesdays will have a grammar focus. We're going to try out
The Giggly Guide to Grammar, which is described as "
Shel Silverstein meets Strunk and White and the results are both
hilarious and instructive." Then the kids will split up for other work (see below).
Wednesdays will be all about literary elements, with
Figuratively Speaking, again followed by independent work.
And on
Thursdays, we'll explore the history of our language, and its oddities, word roots, and more, with
The Word Snoop. This will also be another day of more independent work for each, though sometimes I am sure we'll take a break from the "work" of writing to play
language games.
As far as independent work, The Boy will be working on more academic writing -- essays and the like. We've decided that he will finish working through
Thinking in Threes, which is really thorough for basic essay writing. After that, he'll move into
BWL writing projects and written history/science narrations, creative writing, etc.
For The Girl, we (she and I together) decided to really foster creativity and just get her more at ease with writing. So on Mondays and Tuesdays, she'll be working on free writing -- short stories, or longer ones if she chooses. Tuesday evenings, I can correct spelling, etc., and then on Wednesday and Thursday, she can work on copying (
copywork!) the story out and illustrating it. Sometimes we may work in other ideas/activities, and leave the "rough drafts" as is. At the end of the year though, the hope is her spelling will improve in context, AND she'll have a whole book of her own illustrated writings!
As fa as the READING plan, The Girl will continue to work through the
Reading Horizons program, then I'm hoping she'll move into active reading. After reading
my friend Jessica's posts on
this series, I think The Girl may enjoy many of the titles. And she's been talking about wanting to read the
original Oz series, which we are lucky enough to own in its entirety. And of course, I will continue reading aloud to her -- you can see the list of hopefuls
here.
I also plan on actually assigning some reading to The Boy, just one book per "block" of scheduled study.
He's interested mainly in dystopian/Steampunk/sci-fi literature right now, so
his list of assigned books (bottom of the post) reflects that. I will re-read/skim them alongside him, so we can discuss the books, something we enjoyed doing with
The Hunger Games trilogy. I am certain he will continue his fairly heavy load of free reading as well!
Can't wait to see how it all works! And if you have any recommendations on the poetry bit, I would love to hear them!