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Home
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Here is the Course
that Guides
You
on the Road
to Publication
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Writing
for Children and Teenagers is
designed to prepare you for success—as a student and, after completion of
the course, as a freelance writer. It is based on the professional
requirements of book and magazine publishers in the juvenile market, and it
is modeled on the classic master-apprentice relationship.
The success of this course, since 1969,
is largely due to the highly personal relationship developed between student
and instructor. The student demonstrates his or her particular level of
skill in completing the required Writing Aptitude Test, and expresses
personal writing goals.
Based on this information, the
instructor develops a personal teaching plan for each student, starting at
his or her beginning level of skill, and they work together as a team to
achieve the student’s objectives.
Although individual goals vary widely,
we make this basic promise to each student we accept for enrollment:
By the time you finish Writing
for Children and Teenagers, regardless
of your beginning skill level, you will complete at least one manuscript
suitable to submit to an editor.
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Part
1
Getting started
The
course begins with an overview of the field of children’s literature.
It defines the various age groups within the category also known as
the “juvenile” market. Your instructor will introduce you
to the basic techniques of writing stories, showing you how to
establish professional work habits so you can make the most of
your time.
You learn how to write by working
with three different but interconnected and complementary resources:
(1) your own creative efforts, (2) commentary, editorial notations,
and guidance from your instructor, and (3) your study of the work of
established authors. You analyze stories by these authors and identify
the techniques and styles they developed to make their work
distinctive and successful. |
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| Best
of the Children’s Market contains 84 exemplary stories and
articles reprinted from current magazines that buy freelance
writing. In addition, the authors offer insights into their
writing and the methods they used to market and sell their work. |
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The text for this introduction is Best
of the Children’s Market, the Institute’s exclusive
anthology of 84 stories and articles carefully selected from 49
leading children’s magazines. Each author has supplied a
commentary revealing the source of the idea for the story or article
and how he or she developed, wrote, and sold it. As you progress
through the course, you discover that the fiction and nonfiction
models in this book are priceless tools—solid references that
demonstrate editorial standards, what sells and why. |
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You begin by writing an autobiographical sketch and a short story,
to give your instructor material to evaluate. Based on your present
skill level, your instructor works with you to develop your
strengths and correct your weaknesses. Your autobiographical sketch
will reveal your aspirations and the background you bring to the
course.
For your second assignment, you
use the story form and apply what you’ve learned from the course
materials, your instructor’s notes and comments to you in
Assignment 1, and your own analysis of Best of the
Children’s Market, to establish a setting, create action,
and introduce characters.
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Factual
details give strength and vitality to any kind of fiction or
nonfiction writing. They make your writing come alive and ring
true. Searching is an indispensable guide to the
research resources that writers need to find this crucial
information. |
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You use all of your senses and
your newly sharpened powers of observation to invent a realistic scene
or setting. The ability to create the appearance of reality is
essential in writing fiction, and your instructor will be looking for
a sketch describing a specific time and place.
The materials for Part 1 include From
Inspiration to Publication, our text drawn from over 30 years
of teaching our course, and our special anthology, Best
of the Children’s Market. You also receive the first part of
your course manual.
Part
2
Taking a new perspective
The
ability to perceive your surroundings from the young reader’s point of
view is an essential requirement for the children’s writer. |
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You learn many of the
innumerable methods of collecting ideas for stories and articles by
noting incidents, personality traits, odd pieces of data, bits of
conversations, details of scenes, and the dynamics of special
situations. You learn how to use these techniques to produce a piece
of writing with a life of its own.
You are introduced to
nonfiction, a large market that welcomes new writers, and you write
a short article on a topic that interests you, targeted to young
readers. You learn how to use fiction-writing techniques in your
articles to interest and involve your readers.
In your assignment in
characterization, you follow a well-defined method to describe a
child of whatever age you wish to portray. You use specific
techniques to observe, analyze, and listen to your subject, and you
learn the methods successful authors use in creating convincing
fictional characters.
The next step in inventing a
character is to work from the inside out. |
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| Essentials
of English is “a practical handbook of grammar and
effective writing techniques.” It is a “user-friendly”
guide to the fine points of language, usage, punctuation,
and all of the essentials of good communication. |
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| You use behavior and dialogue to
reveal motivation, tension, and conflict, and to create a believable
child the reader can “hear,” “see,” and “touch”
emotionally. You build a story based on your child character, using
what you’ve learned about writing fiction to transform a real
child into a fictional character. |
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For your final assignment in this section, you have a choice: you
can write another nonfiction article or revise one of your earlier
assignments. In either case, you emulate professional practice by
choosing a suitable magazine for your manuscript and following its
guidelines.
With Part 2, you receive Essentials
of English, to help you sharpen your skills, and Searching, a unique guide to writers’ research resources.
You’ll also receive the second part of your course manual, and the
latest edition of the Children’s
Magazine Market. This is a special compilation of more than
600 periodicals that buy freelance material; it lists the editorial
requirements, rates of pay, age and interest groups, and editors’
names and addresses. |
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Part 3
Writing for the market
Your writing takes on a new
dimension in the final part of the course. Using techniques and
insights you developed in Parts 1 and 2, you write stories and
articles and put them in the correct form to submit to publishers.
Your exploration of both fiction and nonfiction markets teaches you
the importance of tailoring your manuscript to editors’ and
publishers’ requirements, to increase the chances of its
acceptance. |
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| The distillation of almost 35 years of
teaching adults how to write for children and teenagers and
how to market and sell what they have written, From
Inspiration to Publication is the most authoritative and
instructive guide ever written on the subject. It is
available only through the Institute. |
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Your ability to match your ideas with editors’ needs is applied in
another assignment. You send outlines of three stories or articles
and get back your instructor’s evaluation and commentary on all
three, as well as a choice of publishers. He or she also selects
your most promising story or article, and you develop it into a
finished manuscript.
Your instructor takes on the
role of editor or publisher (continuing also as your teacher and
guide), because the job now is to prepare you to approach the market
as a freelance writer. With your instructor’s help, you learn how
to prepare your work for magazine and book publishers. To complete
the course, you focus on magazine stories, articles, or a manuscript
for a book.
At this juncture, you take the
most promising outline you prepared for your assignment, incorporate
the revisions suggested by your instructor, and develop it into a
manuscript tailored to the requirements of a specific magazine. You
and your instructor will have agreed on the most appropriate
publication. |
| Your instructor edits your work and
returns it for revision and polishing. It may then be ready to
submit to the selected publication—or it may require more honing. |
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With Part 3 of the course manual, you receive the latest edition of
the Children’s Book Market, a comprehensive listing and
description of more than 500 editors and publishers of children’s
books. Children’s Book Market, like the Children’s Magazine Market, is available only through the
Institute of Children’s Literature. The first edition of each
directory is provided to you as a student at no additional cost.
Subsequent annual editions may be purchased directly from the
Institute.
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You will also receive “Writer’s Guide to Current
Children’s Books,” an annotated list of more than 300
titles. This guide offers an overview of the fiction and nonfiction
books published for each major age level.
Your final assignment gives you
a further opportunity to concentrate on the magazine market. You
study the Children’s
Magazine Market and tailor a story or article to fit the
requirements of the publishers you select. Your instructor edits
your work and evaluates its suitability for those markets. |
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| The 507-page course manual for Writing for
Children and Teenagers is made up of three parts
and four special sections, which you receive as you
progress. |
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| If your choices are not appropriate,
alternatives will be recommended. If, instead of the magazine
option, you decide to complete your course work by writing a
book-length manuscript, you’ll analyze publishers’ requirements
as listed in your Children’s
Book Market, prepare an outline, write the full manuscript
and submit it to your instructor for review, if it is under 8,000
words. If it is more than 8,000 words, you’ll write the first
three chapters to give your instructor enough material to evaluate
the direction your book is taking. His or her final comments and
suggestions will help you produce a complete manuscript that meets
professional standards. |
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2003, 2004, 2005, 2006
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