Posts

Art.

Image
    I recently took up a new hobby: Acrylic painting.     As a certified word nerd (TM) and grammar-stickler, this isn't something I ever really thought I'd do. I've lived my whole life comfortably within the bounds that I Don't Art, because I Can't  Art.     Then I went to preschool.     For those of you who aren't already aware, I am a homeschool kid through and through. As such, I never went to a traditional preschool with centers time and large- and small-group activities. I never went to kindergarten, or elementary school, or had to sit in a desk for hours every day while some adult I didn't care about droned on at the front of the room. My whole life  was school, and most of it revolved around math and play, with a massive amount of reading in my free time because I enjoyed it.     Now, to be fair, my experience isn't that stereotypical homeschool experience where the kids do their school online (or don't do school at all...

Math and Young Children

    Have you ever wondered what it's like for young children who are just beginning to learn math? I have, especially since I started working on my Early Childhood Education Associate degree.     While some people try to show this concept to college students training to become teachers by forcing them to use a different number system (such as base 8 instead of base 10), I'm not that mean--I'm much, much meaner.     See, while using a base 8 number system for the first time will mess with your head after a lifetime of using base 10, kids aren't transferring from one number system to another--they're learning a number system for the very first time, plus a whole set of new-to-them terminology that they have to memorize. So, in addition  to giving you a base 8 numbering system to work with, I am also going to provide you with new terms to use. However, I'm too lazy to invent new symbols to represent my numbers, so you're just going to have to work with th...

The Value of Play

    "Play is the highest form of research." -- often attributed to Albert Einstein, but this is apparently incorrect ; N. V. Scarfe appears to be the person who said this first.     Regardless, this is one of the primary quotes in use by my professors this semester, because I have been studying early childhood education, and, at least in the UVU community of early childhood professionals, play is considered one of the most important elements of a quality early childhood program, which is often left behind in favor of greater academics both in preschool and during the elementary and high school years.     I kind of already knew this.     Because of my job at Thanksgiving Point, I have seen firsthand how play-based learning can work. Kids beg their parents to go to Thanksgiving Point, whether it's to go see the butterflies, to go ride the ponies and the train, or to climb the giant playground (each different elements of a few of the venues at Thanks...

What I Write

    In the last eighteen months, I have been on a journey of exploration. Ever since I wrote the first official draft of The Noble Thief  (the novella I'm revising right now, and hope to publish in the next [couple] year[s]) and realized that there wasn't a lot of magic in it, I've been questioning whether I can really call myself a fantasy writer. After all, if your whole magic system is nothing but a volcano that can understand people's intents, that doesn't feel very magical--or very fantasy. In fact, the most fantasy-like part of The Noble Thief  is the plot, which follows the classic fantasy plotline of a runaway/exiled/kidnapped princess who reclaims her throne. Where have we seen that before? Oh, yeah, fairy tales and fairy tale retellings:  The Goose Girl  by Shannon Hale, The Golden Braid  by Melanie Dickerson, The Fairest Beauty  by Melanie Dickerson, etc.     This questioning has raise a lot of insecurities for me--I call myse...

Speculative Fiction

    Hello, and welcome back to Hats, Boots, & Chocolate! I hope all is going well for y'all right now. :)     Today, I want to talk about speculative fiction, and then I'll discuss how that relates to what I think my genre as a writer is.     The reason this has come up is that, a few days ago, I was chatting with one of my professors before class. You see, that day, I brought a book to school with me to read in the gaps between my classes (if you're interested, the book is Allegiant , which is Book 3 of Veronica Roth's Divergent trilogy. It's an awesome trilogy; I highly recommend it. The movies are pretty good, too, but I was a little disappointed to find that the movies changed a lot of things from the books, and a lot of those changes ultimately simplify the plot, which is kind of sad.). Anyhow, my professor came over and asked, "What age are you reading?"     Once we clarified that she was asking whether I was reading YA or Children's Lit...

October '24 FWSG

    Welcome back! Sorry it's been so long since I've posted anything; I have been knocked upside down and backwards by school, and only now have I even begun writing stories  again, and that mostly because next week is Fall Break and I have less homework to do than normal.     This post is a Frustrated Writer Support Group post, which is basically my version of an open mic. So, if you have anything writing-related that you need to get off your chest, be it a complaint, a victory, or something else entirely, feel free to drop it in the comments!