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How to teach your child to write a novel: Preparation


Junior Secret Novelist Club

Hi! Welcome to the first part of this free course, "How to Teach a Child to Write a Novel." This is the first in a series of posts that will show you how to take a young child through the process of planning a novel. You'll start a young novelist club, teach eight weekly lessons, and prepare your students to take on one of the toughest creative challenges out there! Make better writers and better readers in eight easy lessons. Begin here! If you're not a child, if you don't intend to teach a child, if you want to write a novel yourself, stick around. You just might learn something and have some fun too.

Writing a book is not easy. It’s not something that people generally expect a child to be able to do. Not many children are willing to even contemplate writing a book, let alone attempt to begin one. This hesitation is not a natural reaction; it is a learned one, most likely born out of a parent’s impression of what’s involved in writing a novel. Kids don’t know that writing a novel is something that should intimidate them. And truly, there’s no reason for a child to approach novel writing with such trepidation. Can an eight year old child write a best-selling novel or a literary masterpiece? No. But in the process of writing the novel she can write, she learns a lot about the books she’s reading, and a lot about the creative process, and has a lot of fun.

How do you teach your child to write a book? I'm going to show you how, in eight lessons. The curriculum I'm sharing is less a curriculum and more like guidelines for running a club. Kids will name their club, choose a secret handshake and “oath,” and earn “badges” by doing weekly lessons, games, and activities. By completing these lessons, the student prepares him or herself for the task of writing a novel, without ever getting spooked by the enormity of the task.

To form your own "Junior Secret Novelist Club," (doesn't the word "secret" make it sounds cooler right away?) you will first need some kids. Six is a good number. For optimal fun and awesomeness, these should be mostly kids who are pretty game. Kids who are nervous and uncertain will definitely benefit from this course, but there should be a good percentage of kids who will jump in with both feet and not be afraid to get a little crazy. With a few enthusiastic little writers in the mix, the hesitators will be more likely to cast aside doubt and join right in.

You’ll need a notebook for the kids to write in, do their homework in, and use to collect their exercises. Choose a small notebook, not a standard size, so they can really fill it up. A 3x5 is too small, but an 8x10 is too big. 6x9 is perfect, and recycled paper is cool. Ideally the notebook will have a sturdy front and back cover, since this is where the students will be collecting their badges. You will also need eight very very cool stickers per child that are more like badges than paper stickers. I found three dimensional glossy flower ones for the girls, and metallic compass/clock stickers for the boys. Look in the scrapbooking aisle for something that will really make their eyes go wide.

The key concepts are as follows:

  • Writing a novel is fun.
  • Writing a novel can be broken down into easy, manageable steps.
  • By the time you get to the part where you have a blank page in front of you, you have a solid, detailed plan and lots of material to use in your book.
  • Planning and writing your own novel helps you become a better reader of books that others have written.
  • Finishing means getting all your badges, not writing a complete novel and typing The End at the end.

The boy's notebook

On the front cover of the notebook, mark off four spaces, and label them GENRE, HERO, VILLAIN, and CONFLICT. On the back cover, mark off four more spaces, and label them SETTING, PLOT MAP, ANALYSIS, and CHAPTER LIST. Each week, as the children complete the exercises, you’ll hand out their badges.

The final thing you’ll need is something really super ridiculous to award them at the end of the course. I used a cool-looking paper clip, which became the Official Novel Writing Paperclip. After the final meeting of the club, you will pass out these official totems, and authorize the students to write their novels. Yes, it will be silly, but yes, you very much need something tangible. You could use hats, t-shirts, socks, necklaces, or whatever can be turned into an official, authorized novel writing item.Kids, notebooks, badges, and a final prize. If you have all that in order, you are ready to begin!

 

For more info:
The full series:
Do you have questions about  this lesson? You can email me here.
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All lessons include links to printable worksheets and documents, so everything you need is right here! If you would like a free copy of the full course as one PDF, including all lessons and worksheets in one printable document, here's how to get it: Email me with evidence that you've promoted this course to at least one other person (in an email, on a list, on a blog, on your Facebook or Twitter, etc.) and I'll email you the PDF of the whole course. You can CC me on your email, or point me to your Twitter or FB, or show me your blog. Please help me promote this course, and get a full PDF of the course to easily print and use or save for future use! To promote the course, here's a shortened URL for you to use: http://bit.ly/1s42Ou

 

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By

Norfolk Books Examiner

Lydia Netzer is a writer, reader, bookstore habitué, and grad school survivor. Her first novel, Shine Shine Shine, is forthcoming from St. Martin's...

Comments

  • Tiff 2 years ago
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    Will this work for adults, too! Or do I have to eventually get to "The End" ??

  • Lydia 2 years ago
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    Yeah, I'm pretty sure that for adults a 'The End' is much more satisfying. ;D

  • Jason Black 2 years ago
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    This is wicked cool. Thanks so much!

    Oh, and to "Tiff": yes, this should work for adults, too. As a freelance editor, I can tell you firsthand how many of my clients would sorely benefit from some basic grounding in fiction structures: the protagonist-antagonist-conflict triangle, plot, genre, setting, and all the rest of it.

    Adult writers probably don't need to have an "official novel-writing totem" bestowed upon them at the end of the course, but believe me, they need the advice just as much as the kids do.

  • Mayra Calvani 2 years ago
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    Fabulous series of articles. Thanks! I'll mention this on my blog.

  • Luci 2 years ago
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    Thank you! It will be a great help.

  • Jody 2 years ago
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    This looks really great, and a wonderful idea to promote writing! Thank you for sharing. :-)

  • Anonymous 1 month ago
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    unable to contact Lydia to get a copy of the pdf and worksheets.
    I've pinned on Pinterest and posted on FB. My email to her comes back.

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