Are you teaching a class or group? Our Bible studies and products are designed for single-family use only. However, we do offer this site license for homeschool groups, churches, and any other classes involving multiple families.
This license gives you a DIGITAL copy of the product and the rights to print it as needed for your
group of up to 25 members. If you have more families in your group, please contact us so we can help with a solution that meets your needs.
Nothing will be mailed to you as this is a digital product. You can print off the file and staple it together.
Fostering creativity is not easy, and even the most eager of students can become overwhelmed. In Your Own Words keeps creative writing manageable and enjoyable by carefully and clearly explaining new concepts while allowing your high schooler to practice what they're learning. Through daily exercises and writing assignments at the end of each unit, students are challenged to expand their creative horizons and practice techniques they may never have attempted before.
Each unit of the journal breaks down the writing process into manageable pieces, clearly explaining each step. Checklists and reminders ensure your student understands what is required of them and what parts of their writing to focus on at each stage of the process. Students get to complete a review and assessment after both the poetry and prose sections of the book in order to refresh their memory and show how much they have learned. From brainstorming to finalizing, students are taught and equipped!
By examining a wide variety of literature, from journal entries to ballads, students are taught to engage with many styles of writing. Helpful questions and prompts get your student thinking outside their comfort zone and equip them to grow their reading, writing, and overall communication skills even after they've completed the journal.
Not sure your student will love poetry? That's okay! In Your Own Words demystifies poetry by explaining poetic styles, meter, literary devices, and structures like feet, lines, and stanzas. Then, your high schooler is challenged to write their own poetry using the tools they've been given and the concepts they've learned.
Select the number of participants in each age group: