Welcome to the fiftieth of our Creative Challenges. WriteMovies’ 100-Day Creative Challenge 50 is about teaching and learning through storytelling.
Guidance: For the next 20 minutes, use whatever method you like – thoughts and ideas, mind maps, diagrams or sketches, a sample of script, prose, poetry – as you prepare a creative piece, about:
A story that will teach us something important about how the world works.
- As you work through this task, you might also consider how this activity relates to teaching and learning through storytelling.
- Save or photograph your work as a document called “100DayCC50”. Then reflect on this experience and what it has taught you about you and your writing: what comes naturally to you, which aspects were easy and difficult, and the subjects, angles and attitudes that you like to focus your writing on.
- Share online if you like using the hashtag #100DayCC50 to compare to other people’s experiences and support each other, or submit to our Academy Lite if you’re a subscriber!
When you complete the Challenge – or if you get completely stuck – then look at the Feedback below!
Feedback:
I believe that all great writing teaches us something important, about the world and how it works; about how people think and act and make choices. This is true of comedy, fantasy and sci-fi as much as it is of drama – by watching what happens and how things play out, we are learning about the story world and how it affects the people who live within it. And that story world has vital parallels to our own, even if it’s in a totally alien setting.
This works in very different ways in different genres – consider what we learn from INDIANA JONES, STAR WARS, FRIENDS, ZOOLANDER, MONTY PYTHON…
So my final word, as you complete Creative Challenge 50, is this. Use your writing to teach us about how YOU see the world – how it works, what makes it tick. It is through this, more than anything, that your ‘unique voice’ as a writer will reveal itself. All of the other aspects of writing we have explored so far are simply modes for you to show us this. Writing is powerful enough to move hearts and change the world: if you had the power to do that, what would you use it to change? Maybe THAT is what you should be aiming for, in your writing and your career.
General tips and feedback:
Many writers, naturally, don’t find it easy to be creative ‘on tap’ – especially for work that they didn’t set themselves. But to write professionally, you will usually need to meet deadlines and requirements, that can’t be put off, for briefs you didn’t choose for yourself: even if you’re ill or feeling down, you’ll usually have to just find a way through, and get the results that are needed, to the quality that’s necessary. So the WriteMovies Creative Challenges are designed to help you find ways around the crucial issues of ‘block’.
We do this by setting a (deceptively!) simple brief, and encouraging you to use a variety of methods, approaches and creative products in order to find ways around it, and generate some kind of outcomes that might be useful to you in the future. Whatever state your mind and mood are in – energetic or tired, stimulated or bored, motivated or disengaged, etc – there are different ‘modes’ of creative productivity which you can engage, to make the best of it: editing your work if you can’t write, making notes if you can’t generate script, etc. Try a mix of methods to make the most of activities such as the Creative Challenges, especially anytime you get stuck: just keep adding notes, sketches etc freely, you can decide later whether any of them are useful! Also note that the brief is to ‘prepare’ a creative work – not to actually make it straight away, before you feel ready to! But if you’ve come away from this with a passage of prose or script or even poetry, well done!
Hopefully this activity will have shown you the potential value of our Creative Challenges, and the benefits of making a routine to complete them, and persisting with it day by day to gradually improve all aspects of your writing and to develop solutions to ‘block’, that you will become more and more proficient with over time. We recommend that you commit to fulfilling the 100-Day Creative Challenges, sharing your outputs to gain the support and feedback of other writers working on the same activities, and if you’d like expert daily feedback from us on this and much more, additional material, subscribe to the WriteMovies Academy Lite now!