Story-building is a fun creative writing course aimed at children aged 8-12 (with parental guidance). This course will give your child a sound introduction to writing their own stories. It covers the basic story building blocks of Character, Setting and Plot. These are presented in a clear, easy-to-follow way that makes use of examples to model the lesson outcomes. The course looks at adding quirks and unexpected contradictions to make characters more interesting, how to create a setting that conveys a mood and, importantly, how to structure a plot so that readers keep turning the page to find out what happens next.
The final building block called Construction Tips covers aspects of writing such as narrative voice and dialogue, as well as how to avoid overwriting by ‘showing rather than telling’.
The lessons are structured as short videos that guide your child through the accompanying downloadable workbook. Rather than presenting lengthy lectures, children are encouraged to apply their imaginations to their own writing.
By the end of the course children will have a sound understanding of how stories are built and can venture out into the exciting world of creating their own stories. The course also includes four story starter ideas and prompts to help fire up their imagination.
Not only does creative writing strengthen your child’s language skills and allow an outlet for their emotions, but importantly functions as a means to exercise their imaginative muscle through fantasy. For this reason, underlying this course is the belief that writing stories should be fun and spark creativity.
In this lesson we consider who is telling the story and how this might influence the reader's experience of the story. We do this by looking at some examples, where the building blocks (character, setting and plot) are all the same, but they are told from different points of view.
By the end of this lesson, you will have tried out different ways of telling a story and can decide which way works best for yours.
By the end of this lesson, you will understand how to use dialogue to both give your reader more information about the character as a person, as well as use it as an alternative to long descriptions.
In this lesson we will learn about another strategy to keep your reader engaged and interested by avoiding long descriptions.
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