
If you liked this post, read…Seven Reasons Why YOU Should Sign Up for the Art of Eloquence Newsletter
Christian Communication Training
Little children are inexperienced in communication, but as I will share over the next two weeks, we can all learn some valuable communication lessons from them.
Lesson number one: Speak Plainly.
Adults say, “The honour of your presence is requested at the…blah blah blah…” Adults go to great lengths to use the right words, the perfect invitation and the most respectful language, but at the end of the day, it can often sound confusing, standoffish or pompous.
Children say, “Wanna come to my party?” Children put things simply, succinctly and honestly. They don’t worry about how it sounds. They just say what they mean and because they don’t know big fancy words, they don’t use them. Children don’t send mixed messages. They don’t use subtlety. They don’t mince words. They come right out and say what’s on their mind. It’s clear, bold and honest.
As adults, we do need to watch our tone and choose our words carefully, but we can all learn simplicity from our children. Winston Churchill said it best, “The short words are best, and the old words are best of all.”
I’ll be back on Wednesday with another communication lesson from five year olds. Until then…Bye!
On Monday, I shared all our updated sample lessons/excerpts. Today I’d like to unveil our brand NEW samples. These are samples that we’ve never had before. I hope you enjoy a peek into the world of Art of Eloquence communication studies. Please pass this link along to those who may be struggling with one of these issues or would like to enhance their lives by learning to master them.
NOTE: Each link here takes you to the product page where you’ll find the sample or excerpt link toward the bottom of that page.
Say What You Mean: The Language of Leadership
21 Days to More Godly Communication
Say What You Mean: Overcoming Social Anxiety
Say What You Mean: Debating the Issues
Say What You Mean: Avoiding, Reducing and Resolving Conflicts
Say What You Mean: Beginning Debate
x
If you liked this post, make sure to subscribe to our RSS Feed so you don’t miss one and SUBSCRIBE to our newsletter: for even MORE communication fun, FREE gifts, Book of the Month Club and exclusive excerpts and offers we don’t share with ANYONE else but our subscribers!
x
We’ve updated all our sample lessons!
Over the last year, I have been working almost exclusively on new communication studies, especially the ones that you have told us you needed. Over the year, we have released:
Say What You Mean Debating the Issues
Say What You Mean Overcoming Social Anxiety
Say What You Mean Beginning Debate
Say What You Mean Avoiding, Reducing and Resolving Conflicts
This past year has left me precious little time to do some much needed revising of our website…and you all know how UNtechie I am. Well, in the past few weeks, I’ve been working on several aspects of our website and today I’m ready to announce our first series of changes: UPDATED Sample Lessons!
After much techie frustration, I have finally been able to update and upload revised versions of the seven sample lessons that we have had, mostly for our homeschool curricula, and HEEEEEEAR they are!
Say What You Mean for Preschoolers
Say What You Mean: A Creative Speech Course
Say What You Mean: Defending the Faith
Say What You Mean When You’re in Business
Each sample lesson link is located toward the bottom of the page so feel free to browse! I am currently working to create sample lessons for some of our newer studies which do not yet have them. I should be finished with them all by Wednesday, so come on back to the blog and check them out!
x
If you liked this post, make sure to subscribe to our RSS Feed so you don’t miss one and SUBSCRIBE to our newsletter: for even MORE communication fun, FREE gifts, Book of the Month Club and exclusive excerpts and offers we don’t share with ANYONE else but our subscribers!
x
Art of Eloquence is fast approaching the completion of its eighth year in business this November. It’s been a very interesting ride so far. I’ve learned a great deal about business, about myself and my faith.
When I wrote my first study, Say What You Mean (for Teens), I really wasn’t thinking of this as a business or even a ministry. It was simply an answer to a homeschool friend’s need for a more comfortable way her shy daughter could learn to communicate more effectively. It was important to me that the approach to overcoming shyness and strengthening communication skills be fun and reflect the teachings that are so prevalent in God’s Word. I have literally found HUNDREDS of scriptures that pertain to communication and many of them contain lessons I studied in the pursuit of my secular degree.
However, as I began to form Art of Eloquence, I quickly learned that not everyone was happy with the ‘God parts.’ The woman in charge of a nearby YMCA said she would love me to come and teach there if only I’d ‘take the God parts out.’ A public school administrator informed me that she’d love to recommend that my studies be used in the district, if only I’d agree to ‘take the God parts out.’ My Dad shared with me that he felt that I’d get a lot more sales if only I’d ‘take the God parts out.’
Over the last eight years, I can’t count the number of times I’ve been offered contracts, money, sales, an enormous venue in which to display my articles if I’d only agree to ‘take the God parts out.’ I just could never bring myself to do it. It felt like I’d be turning my back on the Lord after He had done so much for me. It felt disrespectful, but more than that, it felt wrong.
When I got my degree from a secular university, I felt I had a firm grasp of the concepts I had studied. After all, I had a degree from one of the top ten universities in the country for Speech Communication. When I accepted Christ as my savior, I found greater meaning in the lessons He wrote for us in His Word. It more than enhanced my understanding; it put a necessary perspective on every aspect of human communication. I found that studying speech communication without mentioning what the Bible has to say about it, is like studying automobiles without mentioning Henry Ford.
As the years went by, I began writing more about being an effective witness for Christ both as an example and when discussing our faith with others. That’s when I really had some challenges to my approach! I’ve had people heckle me on internet radio shows and I’ve had some NastyGrams sent to my email. I’ve had people disrupt my online events, send scathing remarks to online groups and one lady who chastised me during a presentation I was asked to give for a group of Christians. I found out later that she was a member of one of my Christian Yahoo groups! She wasn’t aware that I was asked to do this presentation nor was she aware that the presentation was to a group of Christians. She simply felt it was ‘intolerant’ of me to quote scripture and talk about Jesus when there were people who didn’t believe in Him. So she stood up in the virtual chatroom so to speak and told me off, left the room and took several people with her.
Many times what I write cannot be divorced from scripture without diminishing the value or losing the integrity of my message. So, though I’ve been asked many times to ‘take the God parts out, for many reasons, I simply cannot do it and remain true to the voice inside me-the voice God gave me.
I can’t say that I haven’t been tempted. I wish I could report to you that I’ve never once allowed it to cross my mind that I might have much more of a following or more sales if I did ‘take the God parts out.’ And I know that there must be others out there who struggle with this issue whether they are authors or not. I’d like to share a thinking process that I use whenever I am presented with a situation like this. I hope it will help you.
Some Christians are directed by God to write in order to reach unbelievers. Some have missions that speak to the churched. Each of us has to listen to the Lord to determine our own path and then ask ourselves questions periodically that will allow us to keep to the path the Lord has set before us.
What is your mission? What questions do you ask yourself in order that you remain on the path God has for you?
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
JoJo Tabares holds a degree in Speech Communication, but it is her humorous approach to communication skills which has made her a highly sought-after Christian speaker and writer. Her articles appear in homeschool publications, such as Homeschool Enrichment Magazine and The Old Schoolhouse Magazine, which also endorses her Say What You Mean curricula, including Say What You Mean Defending the Faith. You can also find JoJo on web sites such as Crosswalk.com and Dr.Laura.com. For more information on communication FUNdamentals and Christian-based communication skills for the whole family, please visit http://www.ArtofEloquence.com
For the next few weeks, I’m going to post a series of articles answering the typical questions homeschoolers are asked. Each Monday, I’ll post answers to questions about socialization, college prep, and extra curricular events. I’ll also deal with how to handle things when your children are grilled by folks who wonder, (as one anti homeschooler put it) “Does she KNOW anything?”
I’ve been homeschooling for over ten years. I have taught every grade level and even graduated one student who went on to an elite university. My children and I have been asked every homeschooling question in the book, but this week I’m going to begin at the beginning.
Why? Why do you homeschool? Why did you decide to homeschool? It’s a very common question asked by many people for various reasons. You may think it has a simple answer, but you’d be wrong. How many times have you been asked a seemingly simple question only to find the answer isn’t so simple?
Folks often ask me where I’m from. Seems simple enough, but my life is not simple. I often look for the reason they are asking. Here’s what I mean. If you are asking where I live, I’m from Arizona. If you are asking where I just moved from, I’m from California. If you are asking where particularly I lived in California, I’m from Southern California. However, if you are asking where I grew up, I’m from New York. (Spent most of my growing up years in New York.) If you’re asking where I was born. Then I’m from Colorado. What if you are asking my heritage? Well, then I’m primarily from Russia. Perhaps you’re just looking to find out what department I came from in the store. In that case, I usually am from the purse department! LOL
There are four basic reasons people ask why we homeschool and the best answer is going to depend largely on your ability to discern.
1. Public school parents who ask why I decided to homeschool may genuinely want to know, but they also fear feeling like homeschoolers think they are bad mothers because they don’t homeschool. It’s important not to overwhelm them with all the statistics about how “homeschooling is so much better than public school” and how you “wouldn’t have it any other way.” You don’t want to condemn someone for their educational choices just as we homeschoolers don’t want to be condemned for ours.
It’s best just to give a short answer with one of the reasons and leave it at that. If they ask more about it, you know they really want to hear more, but again, you don’t want to make it sound as if you think any less of them because they DON’T homeschool. Each of us makes the choices we do according to what works for our family. I know some homeschoolers who only homeschool one of their children and some who homeschool all but one. I know some who have homeschooled all the way through and some who just started when their son was in Jr High.
I usually say something like, “We wanted to give her more individual attention and tailor the subjects to suit her needs.”
2. Public school teachers who ask are usually asking because they don’t approve of homeschooling. They are often upset that their school won’t get the public funds and that so many homeschoolers put down public education. I usually tell them that we started off as sort of an experiment to give her more one on one education and then revisited the idea each year. I let them know that we were apprehensive when we began which tells them that I understand their apprehension now. I add that it just “worked for us” which tells them that I would understand that it might not work for others and so don’t condemn anyone else’s educational choices. If they do become defensive, I may add that my sister’s kids are in public school and they are very happy there and doing well.
3. Someone interested in homeschooling usually asks because they are interested, but cannot understand how it might work for them. I usually find it best to tell them a bit more of the story. I share how we had moved into a home where the previous owners were homeschoolers. With my dd going into the 5th grade of a private Christian school, my dh asked me to “look into homeschooling” as an alternative to the expense for private school. I relate how I talked to as many people as I could and reported back to my dh that I wanted to give it a try, but he said “Whoa! I only asked you to check it out!” Then I follow up with how we decided to try it for a year to see how it worked and we never left it. This allows the person to understand that it was something we, too, had difficulty with and that if we can do it, they might want to look into it too.
4. Someone who is openly anti-homeschool usually asks in order to show me up. What they are actually saying is, “How could you ruin your kids like this!” I actually had many in my family ask me this because my dd was so bright and doing quite well in private school. I used to just say that it’s worked pretty well for us and leave it at that. However, since I graduated my dd two years ago, my answer has changed slightly. I usually tell them that I guess I didn’t do too badly. My dd is in her second year at Vanderbilt University!
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
JoJo Tabares holds a degree in Speech Communication, but it is her humorous approach to communication skills which has made her a highly sought-after Christian speaker and writer. Her articles appear in homeschool publications, such as Homeschool Enrichment Magazine and The Old Schoolhouse Magazine, which also endorses her Say What You Mean curricula, including Say What You Mean Defending the Faith. You can also find JoJo on web sites such as Crosswalk.com and Dr.Laura.com and hosting her weekly podcast, Communication Comedy Network. For more information on communication FUNdamentals and Christian-based communication skills for the whole family, please visit http://www.ArtofEloquence.com
Stay tuned next Monday for more in my article series, “A Question of Homeschooling” when I will share another answer to a typical question homeschoolers are asked.
If you have a question you are frequently asked and would like me to include it in my blog series, please post a comment here or email me at jojo @ artofeloquence.com
Click here!
Copyright © 2025 Art of Eloquence. All rights reserved.