Academy Arc

Gray_Mann

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How in the world do you write an academy arc? I have plots and plans and ideas and whatnot, but the only way to get to where I want, is an academy arc....but wow. I've read some of them in other works. They can be bad. Very bad.

Any suggestions? Or maybe some resources to help me get past this?
 

Juia_Darkcrest

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Time skips, short scenes that advance the story, training time, maybe have a few scenes as relationships develop.
Im kind of doing something similar right now, though my MC is faculty at the school, not a student.

Unless your story's focus is academic life, time can rapidly progress now. You really don't want to write about every time he opens a book, listens to an instructor for an hour, has lunch and chats with fellow students about... that is nothing important.

Just summarize what is happening, maybe add a few challenges they are facing, sprinkle in a few scenes where the story develops and move time forward.
 

Lmae

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For me, the mc goes into the academy to prevent anymore deaths at the school. Going there to learn how to control his powers is secondary.
If his main purpose was to learn how to control his powers, I would just skip it and use flashbacks.

In Nano Machine, the goal of the academy was for the mc to get allies to help him in his revenge quest and to go up in rank. So the main focus was him getting allies and helping them get stronger. There were time skips.

I read one story, that treated the academy as a self taught prison, because the mc was conscripted as a magic user. There were not classes and the students were expected to teach themselves. Students have access to the library and lab. Every week a teacher would give a student two assignments. If you fail both of them, it is over. These assignments can be as easy as to killing a small bird or as hard as capturing a runaway student. If you succeed, the teacher will award you with something, it could be a spell, knowledge, or an item.

It depends on the story you want to tell.
 

KennyCelican

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How in the world do you write an academy arc? I have plots and plans and ideas and whatnot, but the only way to get to where I want, is an academy arc....but wow. I've read some of them in other works. They can be bad. Very bad.

Any suggestions? Or maybe some resources to help me get past this?
I'm not sure about an Academy arc. I've written something where the first couple Volumes are focused on the MC attending an Academy, and later she returns as an instructor, but I wouldn't call any of them an Academy 'arc'.

When I think of an 'arc', I'm thinking of a story arc, a sub-story within a larger whole. Having a 'training arc' makes sense, and calling it an 'Academy arc' I guess would fit, but the trouble is that training is usually pretty repetitive. Which means you'll want, as others have said, to focus on what the MC is doing at the Academy, why they're there, and the moments of their training where things come together, where they learn new details that change the paradigm in some way.

Do not, except maybe as a one-line 'class was normal today' setup / filler line, go into any kind of detail on each and every nigh identical day.

Just my 2c.
 

eagle_360

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Maybe you can delay the academy arc until the characters are older/stronger.

Then write them as instructors instead, makes for a different feeling and tone of writing instead of the traditional "Hee-Hee, I'm a powerful noble. I'm going to bully you!"

Edit : Characters can learn responsibility, leadership, being a role model etc
 

CountVanBadger

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I'm a sucker for magical school stories. For me, they're a great way to do a deep dive into the worldbuilding. What do you mean there's too much exposition? They're literally teaching a class right now! But then, I'm the kind of weirdo who would read a fantasy history book without any kind of real plot if the world was interesting enough.
 

Rolanov

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How in the world do you write an academy arc? I have plots and plans and ideas and whatnot, but the only way to get to where I want, is an academy arc....but wow. I've read some of them in other works. They can be bad. Very bad.

Any suggestions? Or maybe some resources to help me get past this?
What kind of story that you considered as bad for academy arc?
 

SirContro

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Arc? If you have an academy setting, you have to go all in. Make a good portion of the story, at least a third, just the academy. Something you can do to make this feel a lot less boring is to have missions outside of the academy as part of the academy's curriculum so you can make your MC do whatever you actually want to write, and it still falls under the academy setting.
 

Gray_Mann

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Time skips, short scenes that advance the story, training time, maybe have a few scenes as relationships develop.
Im kind of doing something similar right now, though my MC is faculty at the school, not a student.

Unless your story's focus is academic life, time can rapidly progress now. You really don't want to write about every time he opens a book, listens to an instructor for an hour, has lunch and chats with fellow students about... that is nothing important.

Just summarize what is happening, maybe add a few challenges they are facing, sprinkle in a few scenes where the story develops and move time forward.
I plan to have it where the MC is picked up by a distant relative and more or less adopted, and part of the family tradition is academy and then straight to the military. The school is filled with nobles, children of officers, and magic. It's basically a training school for the next generation of state leaders. It'll basically take up a few years or so of life, and then that's all.
I'm not sure about an Academy arc. I've written something where the first couple Volumes are focused on the MC attending an Academy, and later she returns as an instructor, but I wouldn't call any of them an Academy 'arc'.

When I think of an 'arc', I'm thinking of a story arc, a sub-story within a larger whole. Having a 'training arc' makes sense, and calling it an 'Academy arc' I guess would fit, but the trouble is that training is usually pretty repetitive. Which means you'll want, as others have said, to focus on what the MC is doing at the Academy, why they're there, and the moments of their training where things come together, where they learn new details that change the paradigm in some way.

Do not, except maybe as a one-line 'class was normal today' setup / filler line, go into any kind of detail on each and every nigh identical day.

Just my 2c.
If it was in a series of say....10 hypothetical volumes, it would only encompass 1 volume, and perhaps a few chapters of the next. It's not the most important part, it's just part of a timeline of events.
Arc? If you have an academy setting, you have to go all in. Make a good portion of the story, at least a third, just the academy. Something you can do to make this feel a lot less boring is to have missions outside of the academy as part of the academy's curriculum so you can make your MC do whatever you actually want to write, and it still falls under the academy setting.
If it was in a series of say....10 hypothetical volumes, it would only encompass 1 volume, and perhaps a few chapters of the next. It's important for its position of events in the story, but it's not the most important part, it's just part of a timeline of story arcs in succession. Certain characters get introduced and actions and events that occur later have some of their origins in this arc.
 
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