Joyce T. Strand, Author
ON MESSAGE and OPEN MEETINGS
Jillian Hillcrest Mysteries
Coming soon: FAIR DISCLOSURE
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If
you follow this blog, you are familiar with my FunFamily writing exercises
based on the theory that writing can be fun and even therapeutic. To top
that—you can have fun with the family doing brief exercises that will also help
you develop some writing skills.
Following
is a consolidated list of NEW and previously published suggested writing
exercises. Enjoy – and if you have suggestions for other exercises, please add
them in the comments.
Action
· NEW! Write a paragraph about a
birthday, anniversary, or other celebration describing activities you enjoyed. What
did you like the most about it? See if your family can identify the event.
·
You are on vacation with some down time between events—and some
bored kids who believe they should be constantly on the move. Ask each family
member to write a paragraph describing a favorite smell so far on vacation—without
naming it. Other family members are to identify it. You can substitute favorite
noise, sight, person, animal, parent, child, etc. Give a prize—an extra dessert
at dinner, for example—for the one who correctly identifies the most subjects.
·
Each member of the family is to write a paragraph describing what you
do when you return from school, work, the supermarket, or wherever. Do you have
a ritual? Do you throw your backpack on the floor? Do you get something to eat?
Do you change your clothes? Then everyone is to print out your paragraph – assuming
you’ve written it on your computer – and put it into a pile and choose an
alternative to read aloud to the entire family. If you’ve handwritten it, be
sure it’s legible. See if your family can guess which is yours. You might be
surprised at their reactions!
·
Write a paragraph about what happens in the morning getting ready
for work (that includes homemakers) or school or writing a book etc. How many
bathrooms do you have? Do you get up immediately when the alarm or mom calls?
Do you run late? Read your paragraph aloud to the family. Be kind to your
siblings!
·
Describe what happens at your house when you get an unexpected
call that some friends are planning to drop by. As a family, do you quickly
scurry to pick up? Or, is your house always neat, but you wanted to finish just
one more chore? Does everyone help? What do you do? Be sure to share your
description with the family to see if they concur with your account.
·
Write a paragraph about how you wake up in the morning. Does Mom
have to shake you? Do you need to push the alarm multiple times on Snooze? Do
you wake up before everyone else? If so, what do you do? If you have siblings,
do you help get them up? Do you like waking up? How do you feel when you wake
up.
Each member of the family – except
the cook – is to write a paragraph about how the cook makes dinner. Describe the cook – is he/she in a hurry; enjoying the task; dressed in work clothes; etc. Then use at least
3 action verbs to tell us how the cook prepares dinner. Does he/she slide a pan
onto the stove? Attack the microwave door to insert a frozen dinner?
Pierce the cellophane package? Pounce on the potatoes? Finally describe
the result – and be kind to the cook.
Dialogue
·
NEW! Listen to two or more toddlers talk to each other and then
write a page or two of their dialogue. Family members should read it aloud.
·
NEW! Write a dialogue between you at your current age and you when
you were a child or teenager. What would you tell yourself? And what would your
younger self remind you about?
·
Write a page or more of dialogue based on your family at dinner.
Read it aloud at the next family dinner exchanging roles, i.e., Dad should read
Mom; Brother should read Sister. Take turns. It might be interesting to see if
your conversations improve or decline.
·
Write a page or two of dialogue spoken by your favorite action heroes
without telling who they are. Family members are to identify them.
·
Each member of the family is to write a page or two of dialogue of
a conversation that you imagine two or more strangers are saying at a
restaurant where you are enjoying a meal. The family should choose the people –discreetly,
of course – even if it’s at McDonald’s. To make it more interesting, choose a
genre, i.e., the dialogue is to tell a mystery, create a fantasy, deal with
aliens, relate a romance, scare some zombies, or solve a life problem. Assign
roles and then read the dialogues aloud.
Write a page or two of dialogue that occurred between you and one other person during your day--at school, at softball practice, at work, in the store, on the street, or while taking your driver's test. As you write the dialogue identify what started the conversation and what was your reaction to it: were you annoyed? Did you feel like someone punched you in the stomach? Were you short of breath? Elated? Concerned?
Character
·
NEW! write a paragraph describing an animated character. What kind of
eyes, nose, ears does the character have? Does the character move quickly? How
does it approach others? Is it friendly? Do you like this character? Why? Family to identify.
·
Write a paragraph describing your favorite Super Hero without
naming him. All family members to put their paragraphs into a pile. Draw one
out that’s not yours and read it aloud. See if family can guess who it is. (Do not read your own, because your
family will most likely know who your favorite hero is.)
·
Each family member is to write a paragraph describing a character
in a book—preferably one you’ve read. Try to incorporate how the character
appears, smells, talks, walks, listens, rather than use words such as hero or
villain. The other members are to identify the character. This exercise can be repeated with
other characters in other books.
·
Write a paragraph describing how it feels to have the wind blow
against your face; or the sun to shine on it; or bitter cold hit it; or rain.
Remember to include each part of your face—your nose, eyes, mouth, cheeks,
forehead, hair. And remember to include all the senses—smell, sound, sight,
touch. Reward the author of the paragraph who includes the most senses and
parts of the face.
·
Write a paragraph describing a relative outside of your immediate
family. Remember to recall more than just physical attributes: does he/she talk
slowly or in staccato? Walk fast, talk with a mouth full of food, arch an
eyebrow, laugh with a snort? Read your paragraph to the family to see if they
can identify the person. Oh, and don’t be too negative!
Description
·
NEW! Write a paragraph about your favorite famous building or
other landmark without identifying its
location. Offer a physical description
as well as an emotional one—why is it your favorite? Would you recommend others
go see it? Why? Family to identify the site.
·
Write a paragraph describing a restaurant and what you ordered—without
identifying either the restaurant or the food. Tell how the restaurant and your
food smelled (pungent), appeared (filled the plate), sounded (sizzling), and
tasted (spicy, sweet). See if your family can guess which restaurant and what
food you ordered.
·
Write a paragraph describing a store where you bought something.
Be sure to mention how the store smelled, what kind of sounds you heard, along
with a physical description of the building. Tell why you bought the item. Read
aloud your description to see if your family can guess which store – or type of
store—you’re describing.
·
Describe a new place you recently visited for the first time.
Start with your first impressions of the place. Were you surprised at its
appearance? Did it make you remember a forgotten experience? Were you afraid,
intimidated, excited? Next describe the physical attributes of the location as
an explanation of why you felt the way you did. Conclude with an explanation of
how you felt when you departed the location. Were you still afraid,
intimidated, excited? When you complete this description, read it to the family
to see if they can guess the location.
Advanced
·
Write about: A boy enters a room
with his sister. Assign a paragraph to each family member. Do not share your paragraphs
until everyone is finished. Then read them in the following order:
o Write a paragraph to describe the
room: is it a jail, a hotel, exercise room, bedroom? Small? Large? Does it
smell fragrant or pungent? What kind of furniture does it have? Is it a
restaurant? Bar? Is it humid or dry?
o A second family member to write a
paragraph to describe the boy: physical description, clothes, approximate age.
Is he lean, sweaty, out of breath? Is he wearing shoes or is he barefoot?
o A third family member to describe the
sister. Is she taller than her brother? What color is her hair? Does she look
like a sister? Is she dressed stylishly? Is she sweaty and out-of-breath?
o A fourth family member describes the
action of entering the room: did the two run into the room? Did they appear
frightened, worried, secretive, happy?
Did they both appear the same as they entered the room?
o If there are
still other family members, write dialogue between the brother and sister. The
brother wants to do something. The sister disagrees. The brother convinces her.
They do the task and leave.
o Additional
family members can choose any of the above to write.
o When you have all finished your
paragraphs, read them aloud to the entire family in order. It should be an
interesting story.
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