Writing with Sharon Watson-Easy-to-use Homeschool Writing and Literature Curriculum

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2 Fresh Summertime Ideas for Writing and Literature

2 Fresh Summertime Ideas for Writing and Literature

SHARON’S BLOG

Happy summertime hello to you!

Since we’re deep into vacations, cook-outs, swimming, gardening, swatting mosquitoes, and avoiding school, I wanted to keep this post light and share some fun stuff that doesn’t take a lot of energy.

Writing in summer?

1. Want some fun writing activities for your kids this summer?

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Your Job in the Circus

Your Job in the Circus

HIGH SCHOOL PROMPTS

“What a circus act we women perform every day of our lives. Look at us. We run a tightrope daily, balancing a pile of books on the head. Baby-carriage, parasol, kitchen chair, still under control. Steady now!”  -Anne Morrow Lindbergh

Anne Morrow Lindbergh knew what she was talking about. Married to the highly popular aviator Charles Lindbergh, Anne balanced marriage, social obligations, motherhood, learning

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It’s Not Just Your Parents

It’s Not Just Your Parents

MIDDLE SCHOOL PROMPTS

You probably are used to your parents limiting the time you can spend on social media: texting, tweeting, watching movies and YouTube, checking in on Instagram, and gaming. Now doctors are in on it, too.

The American Academy of Pediatrics believes limits should be set on

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When a Product Outlives Its Usefulness


SHARON’S BLOG

productI just learned something new today. When a product or service outlives its usefulness, it’s called “end of life” or EOL. Who knew?

I learned this when a company that provides a service to my Website emailed to tell me they are discontinuing that particular service because they believe it is no longer needed.

That made me think of other products or services that have reached the end of their usefulness or are obsolete. Top of the list:

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Create a Character from a Photo

Create a Character from a Photo

MIDDLE SCHOOL PROMPTS

You want to create a character for your story, but you’re stuck. You can’t think of one.

Keep reading to find out one trick that will give you oodles of ideas.

As readers, we find out about characters by what they do and say, what others say about them, what they look like, and what they wear. For instance, if a character

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Proofreading: Three Methods to Make it Easier

Proofreading: Three Methods to Make it Easier

SHARON’S BLOG

Proofreading is never easy. Anyone who says it’s easy is trying to sell you something or has never actually tried it.

If we can’t make it easy, at least we can make it easier for our troubled, weeping students. In fact, with these three tips, you can change it from a job that requires the strength of a backhoe to one that uses a garden trowel.

Many professional writers use the first two methods in their own writing, and so can your students. The third one is exclusively for students.

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The Talking Shoes


MIDDLE SCHOOL PROMPTS

personificationWhen was the last time your shoes talked to you?

Anthropomorphism is a word for “in the form of a human.” It’s close to the term personification, and if you mix them up, it’s okay by me.

Anthropomorphism means giving human attributes to something that is not human.  For instance, the Toy Story movies use anthropomorphism to give life to the toys, as do all the Transformer movies and any other movies or stories in which animals or objects talk, laugh, plan, and do other things humans do.

An example of someone’s shoes taking on the human characteristic of speech occurs in Alexander McCall Smith’s Blue Shoes and Happiness.  This passage comes just after the character believes she has made a terrible mistake with her fiancé and might have lost him:

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Create Your Own Guide to Popularity


HIGH SCHOOL PROMPTS

popularityWhen Cress Delahanty wants to be elected freshman editor of her yearbook, she makes a list of traits needed to win the election.

Her mother asks her, “Traits like honesty, kindness, cheerfulness?”

Cress replies, “Nobody at school I ever heard of was popular for honesty.”

So she develops a plan: become known for something quirky. In “Trademark” by Jessamyn West, from Cress Delahanty, Cress decides to popularitydevelop her trademark by doing strange things like wearing her slippers to the bus and leaving her sneakers in public places to be found.

But her plan backfires.

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3 Powerful Tools for Writing Persuasively

3 Powerful Tools for Writing Persuasively

SHARON’S BLOG

If your writer is reluctant, writing opinions is a good place to start. Everyone has opinions, and most students like to express theirs.

Opinions are all about the writer: “I love  . . . ,” “I think people should . . . ,” “I hate it when . . . .”

Writing to persuade someone else, on the other hand, is all about the reader. Your students make a shift in their thinking: What ideas and points do readers need before they will change their minds? A persuasion essay needs a few important tools.

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