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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "I want my kids to be good writers but we can’t afford private-suggestions for Hs? "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][b]Reading does not make you a great writer.. just stop.[/b] Hire a writing tutor. Your child will have plenty of writing assignments in your public school but they will never be taught how to write. The tutor can help them through the process for each paper and slowly they will become more independent when it comes to writing. [/quote] Literally every writing teacher or good writer I have ever heard says the opposite. If you want to be a good writer, you should read good writing. [b]It's not sufficient, but it's incredibly important. [/b] Read things that are well-written. The New Yorker is a great resource, because the writing is good and well-edited. Find other good writers, both fiction and non-fiction -- essays and articles are helpful because they are closer to what students are expected to write: James McPhee, Rebecca Solnit, George Orwell, Marilynne Robinson, James Baldwin, Ta-Nehisi Coates, etc. Don't worry about the ten-page papers to start. Start with the well-organized five-paragraph essay. A tutor will help, as long as they teach both organization and editing/revision. No one is a good writer without a good editor, and learning to be a good editor makes you a better writer. [/quote] I agree with you here, PP. Good writers usually have done a lot of reading, but being a great reader is not sufficient. As earlier posters have said, some of us have avid readers who score in the 99% in reading comprehension with their arms tied behind their backs and they still have issues with writing. Executive functioning difficulties and anxiety often play a part. So, reading is the foundation, but some very bright kids still need something more to become great writers. [/quote]
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