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Creative Writing Made Easy Homeschooling Today Magazine All Rights Reserved Plot. Voice. Theme. These and other fifty-cent words scare even hopeful novelists, so what confusion do they unleash in our kids? Many children are bursting with stories, stories they eagerly chatter aloud or hold tight in their imaginations. Many, however, are unable to put them to paper. The simple rules here can help you unfold the world of creative writing for your children in terms and methods they not only understand, but get excited about. If you want to, you can certainly study the terms and add more elements. First, though, let your children run with the story using these elements that I call: 3 P's, two W's and an S. The first P: Place Where do your children long to visit? Where would a perfect day take place for them—or perhaps the worst day imaginable? Is a relative travelling? Does someone you know live in another state? It can be terrific fun to research some of these places as your children choose where to set their stories. Offer some suggestions, not forgetting that oftentimes the most exciting stories happen in ordinary places (the supermarket, for example) where something extraordinary and unplanned happens. The second P: People The fewer characters the better, because your goal is to help your children develop just a few characters well, not confuse the storyline with too many. I'd limit the number of characters to two or three, tops. Next, write lists describing the story people: Who do these characters love? What do they dislike? What makes them sad? What do they look like? Are they afraid of anything? What do they want more than anything in the world? All of these answers will find their way into the story, although not all will appear in the story. Some will act as hidden traits that motivate a character's actions. The third P: Problem What differentiates these two story lines? A problem. Without a problem, there is no story. The problem, of course, will have to fit in with the people and the place. If the problem is more important to your child, let him pick it first, then mold the people and the place to fit. Sometimes kids get stuck figuring out the problem. Ask them what problems they have, and help them tailor their own problems to the people in the story. Or, what kind of problems would they expect to find in a private diary? What kind of problem would make the biggest mess? What kind of problem would be very hard to solve? Oftentimes a "theme" naturally emerges from the ways in which the people choose to solve the problem. Double W's And, finally, an S Writing is really the other side of reading. In many ways, they are intertwined activities. We want our kids to be both good readers and good writers. Giving them guidance and tips and guidelines to help them become good readers seems so natural. Let's do the same for writing, and help them to be good writers as well! Sandra Byrd is the author of the bestselling Secret Sisters series for girls aged 8-12, and the forthcoming Hidden Day Series. If you have found value in this article, consider subscribing to Homeschooling Today Magazine. We are only able to offer resources like this through support from our subscribers. Your subscription will bring a year's worth of ready-made lesseons, vital homeschooling information, and like-minded encouragement right to your doorstep!Copyright ©1992-2002 Homeschooling Today Magazine - PO Box 436 - Barker, TX 77413 - All rights reserved |
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