Title: Teaching Writing
1Teaching Writing
2How are we doing teaching writing?
- Still some work to do, according to the National
Assessment of Educational Progress (The Nations
Report Card) - Good news 1998-2002 showed some improvement of
writing skills in grades 4-8 - Bad news no improvement for grade 12
3Serious consequences of poor writing
- Writing is thinking with a pencil
- Writing is a premier way in which children think
and express their ideas - Writing is a way children express creativity,
uniqueness, and indicate what they want - Writing well and succinctly is increasingly
important as children get older
4Is there a best way to teach writing?
- No consensus
- Process is important
- Children need a time, place, and reason to write
- Good instruction is crucial
- The key to children learning to write well is
good instruction.
5Elements of good instruction
- An environment that supports writing (with space
for children to write and the tools to do so) - Teachers who read with a writers eye (so they
can point out strategies that young writers used
effectively) - Teachers who model good instruction (so children
will see how one goes about writing) - Lots of opportunities to practice, accompanied by
corrective feedback (praise the expressive aspect
of the task, while helping the child form
letters and write accurately and well)
6Current challenges in the field
- Schools of education need to offer pre-service
teachers experience in learning what good
writing is, how to teach writing, and knowledge
about the genres of writing (e.g., expository vs.
narrative writing ) - Schools need a greater focus on evaluation, so we
can identify good writing and support children
as they develop their skills
7Techniques teachers can use
- Morning message
- Talk about what is happening in the class,
providing an opportunity for children to write
about it - Say something really exciting or ask a
thought-provoking question about a timely issue
or event (e.g., the upcoming election) - Describe this
- Children want to learn, they are knowledge
seekers. Provide opportunities for children to
absorb information and then write - Ask them to describe this and they will come up
with wonderful language and ideas - Innovations
- Take a favorite text like Brown Bear, Brown Bear,
What Do You See? and create a new text using the
same language model - Students integrate new words and make stories
their own
8Across the curriculum
- Writing is important in every subject
- In math, students can make their own math books
and measure things - Field trips offer an opportunities to summarize
and put words and pictures together in
interesting ways - In science, even at the pre-K level, lab
notebooks allow children to participate in an
experiment and then write about what they
observed -
- In all areas of the curriculum, give children
the opportunity to realize that writing is an
expressive, meaningful act that helps them learn
about any subject.
9Writing instruction before kindergarten
- Example A journal by a four-year-old in which
she writes just what - she wants to
- The teacher captions each page with the childs
words - Over time, the child begins to see the difference
between what she is writing and what the teacher
is writing - This exercise provides the child with an
opportunity to write, and also an opportunity to
learn from corrections
10Writing in early childhood
- Early on, children want to use writing to
communicate ideas - In the very early years, provide children every
opportunity to write letters, recipes, lists,
ideas - The writing may be unconventional, but it will
convey the idea that writing has a function and
is very important
11Writing is different than handwriting
- Young children will dabble with a lot of
interesting ways of writing - Its important to focus on the meaning, on what
theyre trying to say - Composition and handwriting has a place in the
early childhood curriculum, but sometimes hand
muscles are not developed enough to write very
small letters. - Be encouraging and supportive!
12Children with learning disabilities and writing
- Kids who struggle with writing often have a hard
time learning informally or incidentally. For
example, they dont learn as much about spelling
correctly just through reading and/or writing.
Explicit teaching is vital for these children - A lot of kids who have learning difficulties also
have difficulties with self-regulation of their
thoughts or behaviors. Skilled writing requires a
lot of regulation planning, monitoring,
evaluating, and revising
13Children with learning disabilities and writing
(cont.)
- Some kids with learning problems often have an
incomplete or fragmented knowledge base. For
example, if they dont have knowledge of the
story genre, then they are at a disadvantage in
constructing a good story - Another issue for kids with learning disabilities
is motivation. If you struggle with writing, its
easy to develop an intense dislike for it. And
the longer that goes on, the more difficult it is
to deal with - Often, all these things are interconnected.
14How parents can support writing
- Help kids get their thoughts together and
organize what they want to say - Plan an approach to the assignment
- Dont just leave them to sit at the table and
agonize if they seem stuck, help them get started
15Mastering writing is a life-long process
- Remember, writing is the most complicated
language skill that any of us have to learn - Parents need to empathize with kids, knowing that
they work very hard to accomplish their writing
assignments
16Front load the process
- Have the child talk about what theyre going to
write about - Write down the words they want to use but dont
know how to spell - Help them organize the main points that theyre
writing about - Review the goal of the assignment know where
youre going and how youre going to get there - Plan something fun for afterwards.
- Give a time limit put the timer on and do the
hard thing first
17VIDEO
- Invented Spelling
- Mary T. Murphy Elementary School, Branford,
Connecticut -
- A first grade class makes a party list using
invented spelling - The teacher works with students to see what their
invented spelling tells her about the students
knowledge of word structure, speech sounds, and
how they use letters to represent those sounds - The teacher allows students to practice their
phonemic awareness abilities, while providing
teachable moments about accurate spelling
18Spelling
- Too often seen as the poor relation of language
arts instruction - Accurate spelling is a courtesy to the reader
- Spelling knowledge is very closely associated
with reading comprehension. Spelling is a way of
being word conscious, which is associated with
knowing word meaning and comprehension which
results in better writing - Those who spell well are more likely to write
longer and better structured compositions as they
move into the higher levels of written expression
19Invented spelling
- Also called inventive spelling
- Its a beneficial step for four- and
five-year-olds who have not yet entered into
formal instruction - From kindergarten on, kids will learn spelling
better and faster if they are taught it
explicitly
20Phonemic awareness and invented spelling
- The best kindergarten writers have teachers who
- teach kids how to spell the highest-frequency
words accurately rather than relying on invented
spelling, and - study the structure of words from a phonological
(sound) and orthographic (spelling) perspective
21Invented spelling as diagnostic tool
- If children can put together a logical
representation for all of the sounds in a word,
it is very likely that they have good word
decoding skills. - Being able to segment the sounds in a word and
correlate them with letters is key to both
decoding and spelling.
22Teach kids directly how to
- form the letters
- identify the speech sounds
- spell high-frequency and pattern-based words
accurately -
- and they will write longer compositions with
more detail - and structure
23Automatic operations of writing
- Writing is like juggling a lot of balls in the
air - If you have automatic mastery of some of the
basics, you can focus more attention on the
demanding complex reasoning skills
24How to use invented spelling as a diagnostic tool
- If a child writes the word bump as B U P
- Thats pretty good inventive spelling for
kindergarten. Leaving out the M is
understandable, because linguistically the mmm
sound disappears in the articulation of bump. A
little more instruction is needed to get that
point across - But, if the child wrote P E P for the word
bump, that would indicate that that child was not
segmenting the sounds in that word - A good inventive spelling of the word balloon
might be B L U N - But, by first grade, wed want to see the student
break it into sounds (ba ah la oo un)
and know something about how each of those sounds
is typically spelled
25Moving from invented writing to standard writing
- You need a sequence of lessons thats planned
out. Dont leave it to chance - A good writing program should encompass
- Time to develop the component skills
- A fostering of fluency and accuracy with the
component skills - Application of those skills to inventive,
expressive writing
26Spelling supports reading
- One of the most effective ways of teaching kids
decoding is to teach it through spelling,
through phoneme/grapheme correspondence - Through spelling, you can teach kids about word
origins - Spelling and word meaning are connected
- We want children to master the most commonly used
words in the language at a level of automaticity
27When do spelling errors denote a problem?
- Individual aptitude for spelling varies. However,
poor spelling is a hallmark of dyslexia. Watch
for - difficulty beginning to emerge from first grade
on inability to spell the highest-frequency words - continued invented spelling even after good
instruction and practice - spelling words in a dysphonetic way (with little
correspondence between the sounds that are in a
word and the spelling) - inability to remember a letter sequence and
difficulty with speech sounds - lack of strategies for thinking about words
-
- When spelling is a problem, it cant be allowed
to interfere with learning to compose, which
is a fundamental tool for academic success.
28Systematic assessment
- Assessment is difficult because really good,
widely used tools have not yet been developed. - Best practice is to
- decide on a rubric
- talk to kids
- organize around explicit expectations
29English language learners
- Writing and spelling are even more complicated
when there is an overlay of the first language on
a second language - Sound-symbol constructions may carry over from
first language to second (e.g., the difference
between the pronunciation of the letter J in
English and Spanish) - May learn to fill in the slots of a sentence
with correct spelling without knowing what the
words mean
30Writing instruction for ELL students
- Good instruction for ELLs should include
- dialogue and vocabulary instruction
- oral language modeling
- oral language expression (saying sentences aloud)
- talking about the words
- interactive instruction
31Differentiated writing instruction
- Difficult, but it really makes a difference
- Best to work from a common framework for the
whole class, then adapt from this framework for
individual students - Need the structure to make the adaptation possible
32Teachers as writers
- If teachers dont enjoy writing themselves, they
will - shy away from it
- provide too few opportunities for students to do
it - not evaluate childrens writing carefully
- not be able to teach children the characteristics
of genre
33Why genre is important
- The story genre has
- a beginning
- challenges
- events
- a problem and a resolution
-
- When children write a story, teachers should
evaluate it against the conventions of that
genre.
34The red pen
- Marking all over the page can lead kids to think
that writing is only about capitalization,
punctuation, and spelling - Its important for teachers to provide feedback
on content as well. Dig deeper than word count
and grammar - Model good writing, so children can learn by
example - Focus on both the medium and the message. Discern
where children are doing well or need additional
help
35VIDEO
- Writing Poems
- Poe Elementary Houston, Texas
-
- Using a Columbia University program called The
Writers Workshop, second graders learn to become
lifelong writers - The program connects literature and writing
- It is a structured approach, in which the teacher
explicitly teaches the processes of writing
36Tools to encourage creativity
- A pleasant environment where kids feel free to
take risks - A clear connection between reading and writing
(what you read can be a model for what you
write) - Process the opportunity to plan, draft, revise,
and edit - Opportunities to share writing with peers and
teachers
37Encouraging young writers
- Model the process. The work that goes into
writing planning, drafting, revising, and
editing all goes on inside the mind. Make it
visible to students - Help make handwriting, spelling, and sentence
construction routine (automatized, so students
dont have to stop and think of each word) - Provide grammar and vocabulary instruction
38Negative consequences of poor handwriting and
spelling
- If you cant read the message, you cant get it
- If the message is illegible (because of spelling
miscues, for example) people will devalue what
you say - Difficulties in this area interfere with other
writing processes
39Extra attention to the fundamentals pays off
- As a students handwriting improves and their
spelling improves, there is a carryover effect
in - improved sentence construction
- increased amount of writing
- increased quality of the writing
40How to model sentence formation
- Take small, kernel sentences
- Show how to make those into more complex
sentences - Have kids work with you to do the same thing,
then work with each other - Have them apply the practice in their own writing
41Mechanics versus content
- Often interrelated. For example, if you struggle
writing the words youre going to produce less
content - If a kid struggles with mechanics, provide
focused instruction in letter formation and
spelling to help kids move past that point. Look
for alternatives to help the student keep up
(e.g., word processing software, speech synthesis
software) - If a kid struggles with content, sometimes its a
structure issue or a knowledge issue.
Instruction should center on how to get ideas and
ways to organize ideas
42Writing difficulties
- Many children first show difficulties with text
transcription (e.g.,
handwriting and spelling) - Some kids have self-regulation difficulties which
make it hard to plan, organize, monitor, and
evaluate their own writing process - Many kids have trouble with both
- Overlaying transcription and/or self-regulation
issues can be motivation problems and a
persistent reluctance to write
43Explicit instruction
- Explicit Instruction helps all students those
with and without learning disabilities - Instruction should be explicit about
- Process planning, revising, and helping kids
learn to monitor what theyre doing - Goals why kids are being asked to do the
writing assignment and what they intend to give
the reader
44How technology can be motivational
- The ease with which one can move text
- The abatement of transcription difficulties
- In searching for ideas for writing
45Other effective strategies
- Explicitly teach children how to form sentences
- Use reading as a model for writing
- Have kids do research and ask questions to get
ideas for writing - But nothing beats a well-prepared,
knowledgeable, dedicated teacher in helping kids
become good writers.
46Advice for teachers
- Teachers will have to self-teach themselves in
many aspects of - writing instruction. Some ways to do this
- Take time to write
- Join with peers and create a regular time to
write and talk about writing - Talk with colleagues and share effective
strategies and ideas - Provide time every day to have children write
47Is there a specific sequence of skills children
should master?
- No fully developed, specific scope and sequence
of writing skills for all K-12 students exists
yet. Each state has its own, and even districts
can differ within a state - Teachers will need to create a sequence for their
own classrooms. It is critical for teachers to
develop a sequence and plan for how to teach
writing - Look at basal readers for ideas
48Writing on paper versus writing on the computer
- Some kids approach the word processor much like
they approach their written text Im going to
change a little something here Ill try to get
this spelling error there. In these cases,
writing on a computer is very much like writing
on a piece of paper - Some kids come at word processing with big
ideas. They make many more revisions upfront
and during drafting, than kids who are writing
by hand
49Does text messaging have a deleterious impact?
- Yes, in a way. It is essentially a different form
of language and communication - It cant replace academic writing skills
- Some teachers are using text messaging and the
enthusiasm students have for it as a starting
point for writing, then working with the ideas to
transform the writing into something more formal.
This strategy demonstrates how to switch codes
from very informal to formal
50From product to process
- Educators originally thought of writing as a
product, and good writing equaled a lot of text
on the paper - Educators then switched to thinking of writing as
a process, focusing on thinking, planning,
revising, and editing - Now is the time for a balanced approach, so that
the wonderful process of childrens writing
eventually results in correct form and good
final product
51Automaticity is vital
- The automatic operations of writing (spelling,
grammar, structure) dont restrict creativity
they actually enhance it. - The key to developing automaticity is a complete
program of instruction. For example, in a
40-minute writing lesson, devote the first 15 or
20 minutes to skill development and then the next
half to the more creative aspects of writing (of
any kind expository, narrative, poetic,
sentence manipulations) - But we must get away from dichotomous thinking
that skills inhibit creativity. They do not.
52Writing is not solely creative
- Inevitably, good writing also is informational in
nature - Description and accuracy are important and need
to be emphasized
53Reading and writing are connected
-
- The National Reading Panel (NRP) brought a sharp
focus to reading and as a result, reading
instruction has improved - Separating reading and writing in the NRP report
was a mistake. We need to bring them back
together and help educators understand the unity
of these language functions, their
interrelationships, and common denominators
54Writing is all about writing
- It is not enough for teachers to post explain
expect (P.E.E dont do it in the classroom). - Rather, teachers must present and model writing
with students. Bring students to mastery so they
can write well by themselves - Children have to write in order learn to write.
At every grade level, writing narrative text,
expository text, or on topics of their own
choosing, we want them to be excited about writing
55Thank you!
- Visit our website for recommended readings,
- discussion questions, and more about this topic
- www.readingrockets.org/webcasts/ondemand/2008