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Adam's avatar

When I present at teaching conferences, I preach the value of daily writing. I typically phrase it as "Write everyday. Write relentlessly. But start small and make it routine." It's only when writing becomes the currency that you can build to other directions. If kids discuss what they wrote about literature, you cover any "standard" in context.

Teachers should never underestimate the discussion aspect. Before any activity like a Think-Pair-Share, a turn and talk, a Socratic circle, and so on, if kids spend just five minutes writing out their opinion first, everyone has participated.

But if I comment more, I'll just have to link to my workshop "Help! I don't know how to teach writing."

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Sally Bergquist's avatar

I think there are a few grades where writing does need its own block and those are the earliest grades, K-2. Writing is harder to learn than reading. We have no issue with having a block of time to teach basic reading skills in the early grades. But when it comes to writing it seems everyone wants a shortcut. Instead of carving out the time it takes to thoroughly teach writing, especially to the kids who have been least exposed to it and need it most, it seems easier to "combine" it with other subjects. I am totally supportive of a knowledge rich curriculum and kids writing responses, but I don't think the most struggling writers (the ones who need and deserve explicit instruction) are going to get enough by putting a mini writing lesson into a reading or social studies lesson.

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