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All the guests have said their goodbyes.
The punch bowl is dry and
the graduation money is burning a hole
in my pocket. I did it. After 13 years of
home education, I have graduated from
high school. The next chapter in my life
is beginning. I’m becoming an adult with
dreams, responsibilities, jobs, and even
my own checking account! I’m staring
my future in the face and I’m … I’m …
I’m scared out of my mind!
What will I do when I wake up on Monday
morning? Should I get a job? Start
college? Where can I go to learn how to
use my gifts for the Lord’s glory? How
will I know if I’m living my purpose?
After graduating from high school,
I was plagued with thoughts of inadequacy,
as if my mind’s goals were not big
enough for my heart’s passions. I knew
God wanted me to use the gift of writing
He had placed in me, and I desperately
wanted to find a way to use it as well. But
I didn’t know how to get started, and to
be honest I was a little scared to take any
kind of risk.
Maybe you are facing the same situation.
Or perhaps you are preparing for
the day when you won’t be in school
anymore.
I found my direction in an apprenticeship.
An apprenticeship is a company or
organization that teaches an apprentice
the skills of his or her desired trade. The
apprenticeship I found for writing is Jerry
B. Jenkins’s Christian Writers Guild.
Jerry B. Jenkins, the famous co-author
of the Left Behind series, has taken the
Christian Writers Guild (CWG) into the
twenty-first century. The Guild is devoted
to training up godly writers of all ages,
offering members and students an array
of opportunities to strengthen their Godgiven
talents.
Along with critique services, a writers’
online forum, and yearly conferences,
CWG offers its students a two-year, 50-
lesson correspondence writing curriculum,
which teaches the mysterious workings
of the writing world.
Once students decide to join, they are
each assigned a mentor, a master craftsman,
who has had success in the business
of writing. These individuals are authors,
editors, magazine columnists, and journalists,
each possessing an accomplished
writing career. The student is then sent
his very own syllabus containing the 50-
lesson “What’s Your Story?” curriculum.
The curriculum is divided into four
12-lesson sections touching on every
area of writing and the workings of the
industry, training participants to become
well-rounded writers. After each lesson is
completed, the student sends in his work
to his mentor for constructive criticism
and encouraging feedback.
The Guild has a diverse family of writers.
Sixteen hundred individuals around
the nation and the world make up the
Guild’s list of students, each one answering
the call to hone his skills and to be
used to his greatest success.
Erica, an 18-year-old homeschooled
senior from Montana, is an apprentice in
the course. She is implementing the lessons
along with her daily schoolwork. “I
joined the ‘What’s Your Story’ course
when I was a sophomore in high school.
I have enjoyed the course immensely; it
has helped me sharpen my skills and focus
my purpose in writing.”
At 20, Jessica from Colorado is using
her college years for the Guild’s focused
teaching, shaping her passion for novel
writing. “It’s very challenging but also
very enjoyable,” she says. “The best thing
has to be the mentors. To have a published
author or editor right there when you need
them is invaluable. What better way to
learn the trade?”
Darcie, 33, says, “Not only am I learning
[how] to write, but the course teaches
you the industry which, in and of itself, is
a monster to figure out!”
As an apprentice in the Guild, Randy,
37, from Florida says, “My writing career
has taken off.” His first book, a children’s
storybook, was published in late 2005.
Students of CWG can also apply for college
credit through Taylor University, an
accredited Christian university in Fort
Wayne, Indiana. The Guild’s Academic
Advisor, Vicki Hesterman, says, “It
would be great for homeschooled students
who want to get a head start on college
credit from a respected program like Taylor.”
Apprentices can currently earn up to
four semester units for the first half of the
course through Taylor University’s online
program. After completion, students can
request a free transcript and apply for the
course hours to be transferred to another
college. (CWG recommends that students
clarify if they will be accepted as electives
or required courses with the college
of choice.)
Perhaps your students aren’t to the point
of applying for college credit, but you
know the focused teaching would benefit
the younger students in your home. The
Christian Writers Guild has curriculum
for all ages. In August 2005, CWG began
their Page (ages 9-12) and Squire (ages
13-17) writing programs. Today, more
than 50 young students are studying the
focused curriculum.
“I am passionate about challenging,
equipping, and mentoring young people in
writing,” says Jerry B. Jenkins. Both programs
offer two-year, 20-lesson courses
for young students, and, like the apprentices,
the students are partnered with a
mentor. “We’ll mentor each young person
through the curriculum,” says Jerry, “as if
he or she were one of our own.”
At 14 and a current Squire, Maddee
of Austin, Texas, says, “I’m correcting
things in my writing that I never would
have noticed before.” Her parents homeschool
both Maddee and her sister and say
the Squire program has been extremely
beneficial and easy to incorporate in their
daily schoolwork.
I agree with them. The Christian Writers
Guild has taught me more about the
craft of writing than I’ve ever imagined.
But maybe you don’t have a writer in your
home. Maybe you have a singer, dancer,
doctor, or architect. Whatever your children
are passionate about, help them find
a way to learn the skills they need to be
the best they can be. That may mean finding
an apprenticeship, attending college,
or stepping out and taking a risk they’ve
been too afraid to take until now. To the
homeschooled student, I want to encourage
you to turn a deaf ear to the doubts the
enemy will try to throw at you. If God has
given you a gift, He will equip you with
the skills, resources, and strength you
need to see that gift used for Him.
Anna Meadows is a 19-year-old homeschool
graduate studying as an apprentice
in the Christian Writers Guild. As the
fourth of seven homeschooled siblings,
Anna has a passion for using words to
encourage and inspire God’s people to
better living. She lives with her family
in Edmond, Oklahoma, and enjoys being
a full-time aunt to her six nieces and
nephews.
Vi s i t
www.christianwritersguild.com
to find out more about the curriculum,
dates for conferences, and member services,
or to sign up as an apprentice and
start your writing journey.
Suggested Books for Writers
- Sally Stuart’s Christian Writer’s Market Guide
- Introduction to Christian Writing
- Techniques of the Selling Writer
Copyright 2006. The Old Schoolhouse Magazine, Summer 2006, pages 108-109.
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