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How to describe a person | Homeschool high school writing skills

Does your homeschool teen know how to describe a person using vivid vocabulary? Because students can struggle with good observation skills or summoning up an arsenal of strong words, description can be a challenging task!

In The Prince and the Pauper, Mark Twain paints a word picture of King Henry VIII using descriptive language:

Before him, at a little distance, reclined a very large and very fat man, with a wide, pulpy face, and a stern expression. His large head was very grey; and his whiskers, which he wore only around his face, like a frame, were grey also. His clothing was of rich stuff, but old, and slightly frayed in places. One of his swollen legs had a pillow under it, and was wrapped in bandages. This stern-countenanced invalid was the dread Henry VIII.

Likewise, in The Bronze Bow , Elizabeth George Speare describes a young Roman soldier with vivid words:

When he straightened again, the Roman was pulling off his helmet, revealing crisp fair hair. He wiped the back of his hand across his wet forehead where the metal had left an uncomfortable-looking crease. With a shock, Daniel saw that he was very young… The beardless cheeks and chin scarcely needed a razor. His skin was white, mottled and peeling from exposure to the sun, so that he could not have seen service long under the Galilean skies. The eyes that stared back at Daniel were a clear bright blue. He looked as though he might be about to speak.

Descriptive Writing Tools

Can your homeschool high schoolers describe a person using great detail as in the above examples? Can they describe their subject in detail without turning it into a narrative or story? 

When I was teaching homeschool writing classes, this was a hard concept for my students to grasp. Even with careful guidelines, many still ended up focusing on what the person was doing instead of how they looked.

Use the following tips as teaching tools in one of two ways:

  1. Discuss the many ways to describe a person before letting students loose to brainstorm; OR
  2. Once they’ve written and edited their rough draft, give this list of ideas to stimulate creativity and to help them write a meatier revision.

Either way, whether you work on better brainstorming or focus on more polished revisions, improved description will result.

>> How to teach descriptive writing to younger children

How to Describe a Person

It’s good to let your teens struggle with the initial writing process. When they wrestle with ideas and words, it reminds them why it’s important to thoroughly and effectively brainstorm. The following word lists will help them improve their descriptive paragraphs as they think of more concrete ways to describe a person’s appearance.

TIP: Don’t expect students to include every descriptive element listed below. Rather, a few well-chosen details will go a long way toward bringing their subject to life.

Face Shape

Skin and Complexion

Complexion is the natural appearance and color of the skin, especially of the face. For example, “Mary’s soft, creamy complexion radiated health and happiness.”

Eyes

TIP: Pay attention to the eyes, because they often reveal a great deal about a person.

Mouth and Lips

Hair

Facial Hair

Body 

TIP: Choose strong verbs and adjectives, since they help flesh out description.

Clothing

Adjectives Describing Clothing

Sentence Starters Describing Clothes 

Encourage your homeschool students to use strong sentence openings because their writing will sound more mature.

There are so many ways to describe people! What other words would you include?

Do you need help teaching descriptive writing to your middle and high school homeschoolers? WriteShop I provides a strong foundation in concrete description, teaching students how to describe an object, animal, person, food, season, and place. When students learn to choose strong words, they bring their subjects to life.

WriteShop II continues by offering several lessons in advanced descriptive narration, where students weave vivid description into a story or other narrative.

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