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- Course name
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Fiction Writing & Literary Form, Part Two (HS 11-457)-Wednesday at 10:00 AM ET
- Summary
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A 12-Week Course with Aquinas Writing Advantage -- where you learn to
write exceptional fiction and learn literature must-haves for
Theme, Style, & Point of View; Conflict & Creating the Breakout Novel;
and Writing the Short Story! (Part 2 of 2)Do you love stories? Do you want college writing to be easier? When you join this hands-on, high-interest creative writing course, you’ll learn exceptional fiction and literature must-haves and writing know-how for Theme, Style, & Point of View; Conflict & Creating the Breakout Novel; and Writing the Short Story…and learn how to transfer those skills into all of your writing!
How to get the most out of Fiction Writing, Part Two, designed by Erin M. Brown, MA, MFA:
Read: Before the first class session, read through the course instructions here, and glance through the course materials that are open for Week 1.
Notebook: Have a notebook ready and available, and take notes during each live session.
LIVE Class: Come to the LIVE class and bring any questions!
Class Recording and PowerPoint: After class and while completing homework, if you need to revisit information from our live session, watch that week’s class recording and reference the class PowerPoint.
Complete Each Week's Work: Complete the week's assignments, quizzes, and any work assigned in the order that it is posted before the next class.
Repeat the Learning Schedule Each Week: Read the required materials listed, come to the LIVE class, and complete the assignments, quizzes, and homework in the order they're listed.
When the Course is Complete: Once the course is completed to the parent's and professor’s satisfaction, print the Certificate of Completion at the end of this Caravel page for your records.
Questions? Contact your instructor at the email listed below!
Special Notes: Course materials are provided free. This is Part Two of a 2-part course. Students are welcome to join us midyear if there are open seats and they have met the minimum prerequisites.
Accompanying Courses: Students are encouraged to take the accompanying course(s), Screenwriting or The Hero’s Journey: Mythic Structure for Writers. These courses can be taken alongside the series courses or following the series courses. Students can also sign up for the Authoring a Book, Part 1 course as a companion to the Fiction Writing courses. You can access each 4-week section of the course in Unlimited Access at any time.
Total Classes: 12
Class Dates and Times:
Wednesday, January 8 to April 9, 2025. No class Feb. 5 (mid semester break) & March 5 (Ash Wednesday)
10:00 AM Eastern (9:00 Central, 8:00 Mountain, 7:00 Pacific)
Duration: 55 minutes
Prerequisite: Required: Essential Punctuation and Grammar I (HS 9-1) and High School Simplified Writing 1: Strong Foundational Writing Skills HS 9-2. Prerequisites can be taken live or through Unlimited Access and taken concurrently. An alternative to the prerequisite: a passing assessment from the Aquinas Writing Advantage Assessment service. Please contact homeschoolconnections@gmail.com for any questions on permissions. Highly suggested: Part One.
Suggested Grade Level: 11th grade; however, this LIVE course can be taken at any grade level in high school.
Suggested Credit: One (1) full semester’s credit for Creative Writing, Fiction Writing, or English
This course is created by Erin M Brown, MA, MFA (AKA Erin Brown Conroy/E.B. Conroy).
Your LIVE Class Instructor is
Course Description: “What makes great fiction? And how can I use fiction writing to make all of my writing dynamic, interesting, and strong?” In this course (the second of two successive courses), you’ll learn what makes excellent fiction writing — and hone your writing skills through the elements and techniques of writing an excellent story. Whether you want to write a novel or want to be a dynamic, successful writer in all that you do — learning the elements of theme, writing style, point of view, creating conflict, and “what makes a short story great” allows you to write exceptionally well, raise your written communication skills, become skilled in the elements of literary analysis, and be fully prepared for college and beyond.
Course Outline:
Theme, Style, & Point of View (Class 1 - 4)
In the first 4 weeks, the student learns how to create a dynamic theme, style, and point of view for fiction books of any genre for middle grade, young adult, and adult plots.
Class 1: What is theme and how to use it in your book
Class 2: What is style and how to develop your own style
Class 3: Point of view
Class 4: Integrating theme, style, and point of view to create a dynamic story
Conflict & Creating the Breakout Novel (Class 5 - 8)
In the next four weeks, students learn how to create conflict that drives any story forward as well as how to implement the Christian worldview into story conflict.
Class 5: What makes a great novel and “stakes” (personal and universal)
Class 6: Conflict in the setting, characters, and plot
Class 7: Playing the “what if” game—making your character do the unthinkable
Class 8: Cliffhangers, self-sacrifice, and turning points
Writing the Short Story (Class 9 - 12)
The final four weeks answer, “What makes a short story?” Using famous short stories and dynamic how-to content, students learn how to write a dynamic, publishable short story—including developing ideas for short stories, the similarities and differences between short stories and full-length book writing, and marketing short stories to publications.
Class 9: Defining short stories: micro fiction, flash fiction, short stories, novelettes, and novellas
Class 10: Characteristics of dynamic, saleable short stories
Class 11: Brainstorming, outlining, and forming your short story
Class 12: Who buys and publishes short stories? Short story markets and sales
Course Materials: All materials are provided FREE in the course. Word 2007 or later version or the ability to convert a document to a Word-compatible document. If you do not own Microsoft Word 2007 or a later version, you can use a system such as Google Docs that converts to Word documents FREE.
Homework: Weekly writing assignments with direct feedback from the instructor. There is an estimated three (3) to four (4) hours per week for homework outside of class time that includes reading, writing, and responding to feedback.
Fee: All 12 classes: $277 if you register on or before November 15, $297 if you register after November 15. (Registration closes one week before the first day of class. After that date, registrations are not guaranteed. There is a $20 surcharge for late enrollments after the course is closed.)
Technical Help: If you have any technical trouble or questions about course content, please email us at homeschoolconnections@gmail.com.
©2016-24 Homeschool Connections and Erin M. Brown, MA, MFA (aka author Erin Brown Conroy/E. B. Conroy) All rights reserved.
This course is designed by Erin M. Brown, MA, MFA.
This material is only to be used for its intended purpose by active subscribers of Homeschool Connections. Any other use without explicit permission is in violation of the fifth commandment (yes, that 5th commandment) and in violation of US and International copyright laws
You may print or download to local hard disk extracts for your personal homeschool and non-commercial use only. This is not to be used for homeschool co-ops without express written permission from Homeschool Connections.
- Course name
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Fiction Writing & Literary Form, Part Two (HS 11-457)-Wednesday at 10:00 AM ET
- Instructor
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Cherise Papa
- Semester
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Spring 2025
- Category
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Writing ➤ 11 Series: Fiction Writing & Literary Form (Creative Writing)
- Grade level
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High School
- Editors
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Erin M. Brown, MA, MFA, Aubrey Heki, Bonnie Donlon, Sharon Hamric-Weis, Donna Graziose
- Monitor
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Anastasia Brooks
- Start time
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January 8th, 2025 at 10:00 AM ET
- Course type
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Live
- Price
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$295
- Seats available
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25 seats available
- Seats remaining
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10 seats remaining
- Relative due dates
Cherise Papa
About Cherise Papa
Cherise Papa, English B.S., has worked for ten years as a fiction editor helping authors create the books of their dreams.
Currently Ms. Papa is working as a managing editor and building a small press to help authors publish series in indie markets. She also volunteers at Fyrecon and is working behind the scenes at a different press to help publishers enter into new digital markets.
Her passion for story and helping writers discover that passion for themselves has driven her love for editing and teaching. Ms. Papa lives in on the Virginia coast with her husband and three young children, where they enjoy family adventures and fostering their children's creativity through the arts, music, play, and more books and board games than they can count.
You can find her live teaching the Fiction 11 series and grading the Fiction X series.
Anastasia Brooks
Anastasia grew up as number three of six siblings, originally born in the city then raised in the countryside Anastasia was homeschooled alongside her younger siblings after two years of attending a private Catholic School. When she came into the upper middle school years she took Homeschool Connection classes until she graduated highschool. After prayer and discernment she decided to start her own small business specializing in chapel veils and bridal veils instead of pursuing further education. During Anastasia's free time she can be found in a good book, playing with sheep or learning deeper about the Catholic Faith.