Cholera Case
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My son is writing college application essays. Some are 250 words or less. Ouch. Short is hard.
Which brings up an interesting question: should writers help their kids with writing assignments? Around here, it goes like this:
* They always, always, always do the rough draft with no input from me.
* They get to decide when to ask me for advice, if at all. Sometimes, they share work just because they like what theyve written and are proud of it. Im not lying when I say that both of them are far better writers than I was at their age.
* The most common thing I ask to see is more detail. Personal, vivid detail. No “I participated in outdoor activities” when “I chased an armadillo” is the colorful truth.*
* I encourage them to go at it again. They usually do.
* They can bring any piece of writing back to me as often as they want. Ill read it. We can talk about it. But the works all theirs.
One more thing. They know how many times writers—all writers—rewrite their work. I tell them. Repeatedly. My husband recently backed me up, telling my son that he re-wrote an important briefing nine times. Nobody in this house ever gets it right the first time. Except the dog. Shes brilliant.
*Im not sure if an armadillo pursuit belongs on a college application, but its 100% true and one of my sons favorite memories of our time in Mississippi.
P.S. This blog post is exactly 250 words.