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Writing: The Sixth Essential Component of a Reading Program

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Title: Writing: The Sixth Essential Component of a Reading Program


1
Writing The Sixth Essential Component of a
Reading Program
  • Louisa C. Moats, Ed.D.

2
  • Student writing sample 9th grader

(expression)
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Writing Requires High and Low Level Abilities
  • Hayes and Flowers (1980) studied proficient,
    adult writers and proposed that three recursive
    processes are engaged when mature people write
  • planning the output
  • translating ideas into written words
  • reviewing and revising what is written

6
Three Major Components
Plan Generate Ideas Set Goals Organize Ideas
Review Revise, Edit Read as audience Repair,
improve Proofread
Translate Generate Text Transcribe onto the page
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(1)Planning to Write
  • Planning involves three major sub-processes
  • Generating ideas what I am going to say
  • Setting goals what I want to accomplish
  • Organizing the writing what form I will use to
    express my ideas

8
(2)Translate Words Into Print
  • Two major sub-processes highly dependent on
    working memory, automatic symbol recall, and
    linguistic proficiency
  • (Virginia Berninger et al., U. of Washington)
  • Transcription the translation of language into
    conventional written symbols
  • Text generation the translation of ideas into
    language The process of choosing words

9
(3)Review and Revise
  • Two major sub-processes
  • Read from the readers perspective Is the
    message complete, logical, written with
    conventional symbols and grammar?
  • Revise, edit Are my ideas clearly expressed? Did
    I reach my audience? Are the conventions
    respected? What will add interest?

10
Poor Writers Characteristics
  • Primary and significant problems with
    transcription (spelling, handwriting,
    punctuation)
  • Impoverished language development overall
  • Limitations of working memory difficulty
    planning, organizing, retrieving, sorting,
    juggling many balls at once

11
Poor Writers Lack Basic Skills
  • Poor writers are limited to a great extent by
    spelling, handwriting, and working memory
    problems in both the primary and intermediate
    grades (Berninger Graham and Harris)
  • Handwriting problems affect both fluency and
    quality of writing spelling problems especially
    affect the amount that is written

12
What Does Research Say About Skills?
  • (1) The ability to copy text fluently
    (handwriting proficiency) is related to the
    ability to identify letters and letter groups
    quickly, the ability to program the fingers to
    make specific movements, and the ability to print
    the alphabet in order.

13
What Does Research Say About Skills?
  • (2) Spelling ability in the primary grades is
    related to skill in copying geometric forms,
    recalling and writing the alphabet from memory,
    nonsense word reading, and overall verbal
    reasoning ability especially knowledge of word
    meanings.
  • Later on, only the language skills account for
    variance in written composition.

14
Role of Working Memory
  • Working memory coordinates all the processes of
    planning, translation, and revising the product.
    It holds sentences in mind while they are being
    formed/revised.
  • Transcription and working memory explain much of
    the variance in composition quality and fluency
    at intermediate level.

15
Implications
  • The ability to transcribe words into written
    symbols fluently and accurately is essential for
    fluent production of quality writing.
  • Composition (content and organization) will be
    limited in the intermediate grades if spelling
    and handwriting are poor.
  • Children need a great deal of systematic practice
    to master the tools of writing.
  • (Berninger et al., 1999)

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Student Writing Sample Third Grader
(basement)
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One time when I was frightened was when.. He ask
me did I want some candy One time when I was
frightened! When I was sleeping in my room. When
I was frightened, it was because I was watching a
scary movie that I have not seen before, I
jumped! It was one thing I saw too was a box.
I askt Woody why are you laughing.
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Implications
  • Writers workshop is not sufficient!
  • Lessons must balance skill development with
    stages of the writing process (prewriting,
    drafting, conferencing, editing and revising,
    publishing)

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A Lesson Design
  • 15 minutes Letters word segmentation
    sound-symbol match morpheme study
    sentence dictation.
  • 25 minutes Composition with a prompt and a
    purpose.
  • 5 minutes Vocabulary study.
  • 10 minutes Author sharing and feedback.

34
Teaching Transcription Skill
  • Frequent, distributed practice routines.
  • Practice on spelling and handwriting is
    juxtaposed with composition in the daily lesson.
  • Emphasis on short drills 1-5 minutes.
  • Develop habits with pencil and lined paper not
    pens and unlined paper.

35
Handwriting
  • Ensure the students can form each letter
    accurately. Follow a sequence of component
    strokes that have been made explicit through
    numbered arrow cues. Cover the letter after it is
    figured out have child write letter from memory.
  • Have students write the entire alphabet from
    memory once a day and time themselves after they
    become accurate.

36
Spelling
(muv or move?)
  • Teach the most useful correspondences between
    phonemes and graphemes explicitly.
  • /k/ /w/ /e/ /n/
  • q u ee n
  • Then practice the whole word in dictation,
    proofreading, and writing many times.

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Teach Word Building by Morpheme
co in sub con contra uni
-ion -ity -ible -ation -ical -atile
VERT, VERS
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45
Building Sentence Fluency (2)
eagle
flew
each
its
to
perch
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48
Paragraphs
  • EXPLICIT INSTRUCTION WITH GRAPHIC ORGANIZERS
  • Narrative or time sequence paragraph.
  • Reason paragraph (cause-effect).
  • Descriptive paragraph.
  • Compare/contrast paragraph.
  • Enumeration or example paragraph.

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Planning Organize!
My Story Outline
When and where did it happen? Who is it
about? What is the problem?
beginning
middle
First, next, then, after
How is the problem solved? How does it end?
end
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The End
  • Structured, explicit, cumulative instruction in
    language for reading and writing needed for
    ALL low language children!
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