They already have the stories.
Here's how you help them write them down.
Printable prompt sets, revision games, genre starter kits, and read-aloud recommendations — made for the parent pulling writing ideas at 9 PM and the teacher who wants something wilder than “What I Did This Summer.”
No credit card. Kit arrives age-matched to your child.
The Resource Wall
Browse. Download. Pin to the fridge.
Everything here is made for real kids — the ones who need a strange question more than a blank page.
The Dragon Economy
What does a dragon buy with gold? Write the world where dragons have jobs, banks, and Monday morning commutes.
Parent Tip: The Crossed-Out Word
When your child crosses out a word and writes a better one, celebrate it out loud. That scratch-out is the whole lesson. Revision is not failure — it's the story getting braver.

Real Kid Writing
"The house was scary." → "The house smelled like wet dog and old birthday cake, and something in the basement kept counting to three."
— Theo, age 9
Underwater Postal Service
A complete genre starter kit: world-building questions, three character templates, one plot engine, and a prompt to write the first letter ever delivered by octopus.
"She asked to write more before dinner. More."
After one week with the Dragon Economy prompt set, Priya's daughter wrote seven pages — front and back — and then asked her mom to read them aloud at the table.
— Meera R., parent of a 9-year-old in Chicago
Read-Aloud Pairings
Books that open doors: The BFG for giant-language play, A Wrinkle in Time for science-fantasy, Pippi Longstocking for rule-breaking heroines.
The "Yes, And" Revision Game
Read your child's last sentence aloud. Say "Yes, and—" then wait. Watch them finish it. Do it three times. The story gets stranger and better every round.
The Lost Map
Found in a library book, page 47: a map to somewhere that doesn't exist yet. Your job is to make it exist. Draw it first. Then write the story of who drew it.
Before & After
BEFORE: "The robot was sad." AFTER: "The robot sat in the rain on purpose, because no one had told it yet that robots don't cry, and it wanted to practice just in case."
— Lena, age 11

The Homeschool Story Block
4 weeks of structured creative writing sessions. Monday: world-building. Wednesday: character interview. Friday: first draft sprint. Includes parent guide with zero-prep facilitation notes.
For the Blank-Page Freeze
Write the first sentence for them. Literally. Hand them the pencil mid-sentence and walk away. "The scientist opened the refrigerator and found—" works every time.
Classroom Corner
Eight prompts designed for 20-minute classroom writing bursts. No prep, no materials, just a question and space to answer it strangely.
Find Your Child's Level
Every kit matched to how they think.
A seven-year-old needs a different door into a story than an eleven-year-old. Here’s what’s waiting behind each one.
Ages 5–7
Early Storytellers
“Dictation-friendly. Illustration-led. Wildly imaginative.”
Sample Prompts:
- 1“Draw the monster. Now write one thing it is afraid of.”
- 2“Your pet can talk today. What is the first thing it says?”
- 3“The cloud is actually a very slow boat. Where is it going?”
Kit Included:
The Crayon & Conviction Kit
What Parents Say
Proof in pencil marks.
“My son hasn't voluntarily picked up a pencil in two years. He spent Saturday morning writing a story about a postman who delivers letters to the moon. He read it to the dog.”

Rachel Thornton
Homeschool parent · Son, age 8
“I teach third grade and I've tried every writing curriculum. This is the first time I've had to tell kids to stop writing because lunch was ready.”

James Okafor
Third-grade teacher · Class of 24 students
“My daughter crossed out her first sentence eleven times before she wrote one she liked. I framed it. The crossed-out ones are the best part.”
Sofia Delgado
Parent · Daughter, age 10
Before & After
What revision actually looks like.
First Draft — Maya, age 9
“The witch lived in a house. It was dark. She had a cat. The cat was black.”
After One Revision Prompt
“The witch’s house had eleven windows and all of them faced the wrong direction, because she liked to watch the sky that nobody else was watching.”
Prompt used: “What does your character notice that no one else does?”
No Email Needed
Six prompts. Free. Right now.
Use tonight. No account, no download, no waiting. Just a question and space to answer it strangely.
“The last library in the world only has one book left. Write the first page.”
“Your shadow disagrees with everything you do. Today it finally speaks.”
“Write a letter from a cloud to the rain it used to be.”
“The recipe for making a best friend. Be specific about the ingredients.”
“Something very small is trying to be very brave. Write the moment it decides.”
“You discover that adults have been lying about one thing for a hundred years. What is it?”
Want 194 more, sorted by genre, age, and length? That’s what’s in the free kit.
One last thing
They already have the stories.
The free Starter Kit has everything you need to help them write tonight — not someday, tonight. Three prompt sets, one revision game, and a guide for exactly what to say when they say “I don’t know what to write.”
No credit card. No obligations. Just a kid with something to say.