Great Lakes Author
J. L. Panagopoulos
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    • Little Ship Under Full Sail: An Adventure in History
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  • Home
  • Lesson Plans
    • Teaching Guides
    • Cool Educational Links for Teachers
    • Research: Passport to History MRA handout
    • Appomattox Courthouse
    • John Brown at Harper's Ferry
    • Fredericksburg
    • Bridging History: Mackinac Island
    • De-Mystifying the Writing Process
    • Journey Back to Lumberjack Camp Vocabulary Lesson
    • Traders in Time Vocabulary Lesson
  • Programs
    • Top Reasons to use Books by JL Panagopoulos in your Classroom
  • Research
    • Historical Research
    • Bibliography
    • Historical Chronology
    • What are Sources?
    • Google Earth Files
    • DIY Google Earth
    • Videos
    • Lumbering Background and Links
    • Research Links
  • Writing Fun!
    • Special Event: Kaleidoscope Authors
    • Train to Midnight Rap
    • Writing Tip
    • Grandma's Grammar
    • Students Writing: Write a Story!
    • Editing
    • Be a Wordsmith and Collect Words
    • 7 Words of Communication
    • Our Favorite Things!
    • Graphic Organizer: Create You Own!
    • The History of Language
    • Write a Haiku
    • Collect
    • Ebooks by JL Panagopoulos
  • Janie Lynn Panagpoulos
    • NEWS
    • J. L. Panagopoulos Bio
    • From the Writer's Desk Blog
    • Contact
    • Interview With J.L. Panagopoulos
  • River Road Publications
    • Journey Back to Lumberjack Camp
    • Mark of the Bear Claw
    • North to Iron Country
    • Erie Trail West
    • Calling the Griffin
    • A Faraway Home: An Orphan Train Story
    • Train to Midnight
    • A Place Called Home: Michigan's Mill Creek Story
    • Castle at the Straits: History of the Inhabitants of the Straits of Mackinac
    • Little Ship Under Full Sail: An Adventure in History
    • Traders in Time: A Dream-Quest Adventure
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Graphic Organizer: Create your own!

​  When Young Authors meet authors they nearly always ask “Where do you get your ideas?”  It is one of the skills of writing, along with building up a large working vocabulary, learning how languages fit together and getting and understanding rhythm and pacing.  Like all skills ,you get better with practice.  How do you practice getting ideas?  Use a Graphic Organizer.
  Make your own Graphic Organizer by choosing a big piece of plain paper and draw a circle in the middle.  In the circle write a word to use as your starting point. You may select any word for the center circle, but I have always found using topic words work the best.  You can use words like SPORTS, HOLIDAYS, PETS, FOOD, MUSIC, CLOTHES, SCHOOL, etc. Next, relax and try to let go of your thoughts, daydream, let your imagination start working.  Your Graphic Organizer is like a search engine for your creativity. 
  Now, draw lines coming out of your main circle and attach smaller circles and label them with your ideas that grow from your main topic word.
  Some of the labels will help encourage you to have even more ideas.  Those circles can lead to more lines that have more circles labeled with ideas. You may discover that as you look at your Graphic Organizer, you notice connection you hadn’t thought of before.  These can often set you off down all sorts of “new” idea trails.
  Remember to keep your Graphic Organizers in your Writer’s Notebook so you may come back to your ideas, to add to it or use it with other ideas to write.
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