The Power of Copying a Text
Posted on May 18, 2010
Filed Under Homeschool, Penmanship, Teaching Writing, Writing
Charlotte Mason recommended copywork as part of the language arts curriculum, and I second that suggestion. Copying a text is a powerful way, not only to practice writing mechanics, but also to absorb the cadence of an author’s prose, the fluidity of each sentence, and most of all, the deep meaning of the passage. If you want your students to commit anything to memory, the first place to begin is by having them copy it.
I learned the power of copying when I did calligraphy for hire. Writing out a text gave me time to reflect on meaning, prose style, and more. Poetry and verses that I copied have remained with me, even decades later. Copying is a relatively simple activity that can make your student a better writer. I hope you’ll try it!
The power of a text is different when it is read from when it is copied out.
Only the copied text thus commands the soul of him who is occupied with it,
whereas the mere reader never discovers the new aspects of his inner self that are opened by the text,
that road cut through the interior jungle forever closing behind it:
because the reader follows the movement of his mind in the free flight of day-dreaming,
whereas the copier submits it to command.
Walter Benjamin
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5 Responses to “The Power of Copying a Text”
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Hi, I'm Janice Campbell, and I'm glad you're here! I invite you to join me in focusing on things that matter- family, literacy, creativity, growth, and service. It's so easy to be entangled by the mundane, but it doesn't have to happen. 
I love copywork …hoping I will be able to give it to our new daughter …right now we are learning copywork from the Bible. Hoping it will help her gain English without too much stress involved. I am sure we will do a lot of this over the next few months.
thanks for the encouragment Janice!
Kimmie
mama to 8
one homemade and 7 adopted
copywork must be good for some judging by what you say. I guess it depends on your learning style. For me it was torture and I didn’t absorb a thing. I guess writing in itself was such hard work for me, (I think disgraphia or whatever, no one knew at the time)that all my concentration was on spelling the individual words. I did OK with taking short form notes from what I read.
That’s interesting, Carol. Copywork is usually the easiest thing for people who have writing difficulty, because there’s no need to try and remember any spelling, grammar, or punctuation since it’s all there in the model. If you ever want to try it again, you might find it easier to have someone write out the text for you, skipping lines. That way, you’re not having to look back and forth for any distance, as each letter or punctuation mark is written under the model. Sometimes just eliminating the physical distance between the model and the copy can help a child who is struggling.
Kimmie, copywork is usually wonderful for getting the feel of a new language. I practiced it myself when I was learning French.
I guess the letters just got mixed up from the page to where I was copying to. Even copying into the computer goes straight from the page to my fingers without registering much in my brain.
When I a child hates copy work, as in most of my kids and grandkids, I generally feel for them, and look for other ways, such as discussions, to help them remember.
If that’s the way it works for you, you’re probably very wise to look for alternates. I believe that everyone has learning methods that work best, and it’s nice when you can find them. Moms and grandmoms have to be flexible, and it doesn’t hurt to make it fun as well.
You have a very nice grandparenting website. I enjoyed browsing! Thanks for stopping to by to share your experience.