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Episode 250 | Making Biblical Family Life Practical
Sponsored by CTCMath.com
If every writing assignment turns into frustration, avoidance, or even tears—you’re not alone.
This episode will help you understand why boys struggle with writing—and what actually works.
Listen to This Episode
If you’re homeschooling a boy (or just helping your son with his homework!) you’ve probably seen his frustration about writing. Yet the ability to put thoughts into words and words onto paper is a crucial skill for life and career. How can you get past his natural hesitation and open up that channel for communication? This episode we talk about some of the reasons why your boy may hate to write, and then, practical ways to overcome those hurdles!
If you’re raising and homeschooling boys, these episodes will help:
Lifeschooling with Boys – Hal and Melanie Young | Replay
Summertime Favorites – Boys, Again
Best Shows Replay: Homeschooling Boys: What’s the Difference?
How do you get your boys to write — without daily battles?
In this practical episode, Hal and Melanie share encouragement and actionable strategies to help boys develop confidence and skill in writing. Whether your son struggles with handwriting, hates blank pages, or simply resists writing assignments, this conversation will help you rethink your approach and give you tools that work.
Handwriting is NOT the same as writing.
If writing is physically exhausting, your child can’t focus on ideas.
Writing becomes easier when it connects to what they already love.
Instead of generic prompts, try:
Birds of prey
Military history
Race cars
Engineering
Survival skills
Science topics
Personal hobbies
If they’re already thinking about it, they’re halfway to writing about it.
Boys often respond well to:
Writing contests
Timed challenges
Friendly sibling competitions
Submissions to magazines or local contests
Even reluctant writers may engage when there’s a challenge involved.
Nonfiction and real-life writing can be especially motivating:
Write an email to inquire about a purchase
Draft a thank-you note
Research and explain how something works
Write instructions
Explain a process
Compare tools, gear, or equipment
When writing has purpose, it feels valuable.
Instead of starting with a formal outline, begin with a content web (also called a mind map).
How it works:
Put the topic in the center.
Add related ideas in circles around it.
Connect subpoints.
Let ideas flow freely before organizing.
This method:
Matches how the brain naturally works
Reduces pressure
Encourages creativity
Makes organization easier later
Once ideas are visible, structure emerges naturally.
Structure reduces stress.
Start with a simple paragraph formula:
Introduction sentence
Point #1 + evidence
Point #2 + evidence
Point #3 + evidence
Conclusion sentence
This easily grows into:
A 3-paragraph essay
A 5-paragraph essay
Larger structured papers
Once they master structure, creativity can expand.
Teach early:
Copy and paste URLs while researching
Keep a running list of sources
Use tools like EasyBib to format citations
Learn basic bibliography skills
This prevents stress later in high school and college — and builds real academic strength.
Strong writing:
Opens doors professionally
Helps explain technical ideas
Wins funding and support
Communicates complex thoughts clearly
Builds leadership skills
Writing isn’t just an English skill — it’s a life skill.
You can teach your boys to love writing.
It may take:
Dictation
Different prompts
Practical assignments
Competitions
Patience
Creative brainstorming
But growth happens.
One son who once struggled with writing is now working on his doctoral dissertation — and loving the process.
Have a question or topic suggestion?
Visit:
RaisingRealMen.com
CraftsmanCrate.com
Thank you for joining us for another episode of
The post Motivating Boys to Write – MBFLP 250 (Replay) appeared first on Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network.
By Hal Young and Melanie Young4.9
101101 ratings
Episode 250 | Making Biblical Family Life Practical
Sponsored by CTCMath.com
If every writing assignment turns into frustration, avoidance, or even tears—you’re not alone.
This episode will help you understand why boys struggle with writing—and what actually works.
Listen to This Episode
If you’re homeschooling a boy (or just helping your son with his homework!) you’ve probably seen his frustration about writing. Yet the ability to put thoughts into words and words onto paper is a crucial skill for life and career. How can you get past his natural hesitation and open up that channel for communication? This episode we talk about some of the reasons why your boy may hate to write, and then, practical ways to overcome those hurdles!
If you’re raising and homeschooling boys, these episodes will help:
Lifeschooling with Boys – Hal and Melanie Young | Replay
Summertime Favorites – Boys, Again
Best Shows Replay: Homeschooling Boys: What’s the Difference?
How do you get your boys to write — without daily battles?
In this practical episode, Hal and Melanie share encouragement and actionable strategies to help boys develop confidence and skill in writing. Whether your son struggles with handwriting, hates blank pages, or simply resists writing assignments, this conversation will help you rethink your approach and give you tools that work.
Handwriting is NOT the same as writing.
If writing is physically exhausting, your child can’t focus on ideas.
Writing becomes easier when it connects to what they already love.
Instead of generic prompts, try:
Birds of prey
Military history
Race cars
Engineering
Survival skills
Science topics
Personal hobbies
If they’re already thinking about it, they’re halfway to writing about it.
Boys often respond well to:
Writing contests
Timed challenges
Friendly sibling competitions
Submissions to magazines or local contests
Even reluctant writers may engage when there’s a challenge involved.
Nonfiction and real-life writing can be especially motivating:
Write an email to inquire about a purchase
Draft a thank-you note
Research and explain how something works
Write instructions
Explain a process
Compare tools, gear, or equipment
When writing has purpose, it feels valuable.
Instead of starting with a formal outline, begin with a content web (also called a mind map).
How it works:
Put the topic in the center.
Add related ideas in circles around it.
Connect subpoints.
Let ideas flow freely before organizing.
This method:
Matches how the brain naturally works
Reduces pressure
Encourages creativity
Makes organization easier later
Once ideas are visible, structure emerges naturally.
Structure reduces stress.
Start with a simple paragraph formula:
Introduction sentence
Point #1 + evidence
Point #2 + evidence
Point #3 + evidence
Conclusion sentence
This easily grows into:
A 3-paragraph essay
A 5-paragraph essay
Larger structured papers
Once they master structure, creativity can expand.
Teach early:
Copy and paste URLs while researching
Keep a running list of sources
Use tools like EasyBib to format citations
Learn basic bibliography skills
This prevents stress later in high school and college — and builds real academic strength.
Strong writing:
Opens doors professionally
Helps explain technical ideas
Wins funding and support
Communicates complex thoughts clearly
Builds leadership skills
Writing isn’t just an English skill — it’s a life skill.
You can teach your boys to love writing.
It may take:
Dictation
Different prompts
Practical assignments
Competitions
Patience
Creative brainstorming
But growth happens.
One son who once struggled with writing is now working on his doctoral dissertation — and loving the process.
Have a question or topic suggestion?
Visit:
RaisingRealMen.com
CraftsmanCrate.com
Thank you for joining us for another episode of
The post Motivating Boys to Write – MBFLP 250 (Replay) appeared first on Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network.

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