Like music, writing is relational—between the writer and herself, or the writer and a wide audience, or the writer and the one she loves. And, like music, it must be grown from the roots up, from the inside out. Writing is multifaceted and beautifully complex.
And writing, at its best, is complicated. It is easy to understand why children in higher grades are often so frustrated, annoyed, or even angry about being asked to write. Very often they are ill equipped to do so, having not been given the proper tools or practice to build their writing capacities.
As Maria in the Sound of Music so simply sang, “Let’s start from the very beginning. It’s a very good place to start. When we read we begin with A B C, when we sing we begin with do-re-me…”