Katie,
The links that Lynn posted really do a great job of answering your questions!
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
So, I'll just share one more quick thing that comes to mind in addition to what has already been shared. As you look at the type of writing your child will be needing to do, both in college and life-long as an adult, it is good to ponder how best to prepare your child for that overall need.
While often as parents, and as teachers, we lean toward training students to write literary response/critique type essays and timed essays, it is good to note that is only one type of written response needed among many. Literature classes and written responses to literature reflect only a small portion of the writing that kiddos will be expected to produce throughout their college years and in their life. Writing is much more eclectic than just one area, and focusing too much on one area will leave kiddos "wanting" in the broader writing spectrum.
![Wink :wink:](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
This is why it actually makes sense to do writing as a separate course from literature study to give kiddos exposure to the broader spectrum of writing (while also writing within the literature area and many other areas across the curriculum as well). If you ask yourself how much of your college writing, and now your lifetime writing, dealt/deals with literary response or timed essay situations, what would your response be? I know that mine would be, "Very little." While it is true that preparation in these areas is needed, it needs to balanced with future writing needs as well. So, in our HOD guides, we seek to prepare kiddos for a broader spectrum of writing requirements, so they are ready to write no matter what the task at hand may be.
Blessings,
Carrie