Instructional Recommendations for Teaching Writing to Exceptional Students

1988 ◽  
Vol 54 (6) ◽  
pp. 506-512 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steve Graham ◽  
Karen R. Harris

This article addresses the teaching of writing, an often overlooked area in the education of exceptional students. Ten recommendations for developing an effective writing program are presented. These recommendations are based on current conceptualizations of the writing process, effective principles of writing instruction, and present knowledge of exceptional students' writing capabilities.

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-24
Author(s):  
Gabrielle Isabel Kelenyi

In this paper, I describe my writing process and theorize it as an act of self-love by examining what makes writing hard for me and what makes it easy for me; additionally, I present a brief argument for teaching writing as or for love as a manner by which to avoid (re)producing systemic inequities in literacy education. As such, this autoethnography aims to inform readers of my lived experience as a writer and, in so doing, share ways in which writing instruction in school contexts can help students develop individualized writing processes that help them love writing even when it’s hard.


2016 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 3
Author(s):  
Anne Kristine Øgreid

Bruk av formmønster blir jevnlig diskutert som støtte i skriveopplæringen. Hensikten med denne studien er å undersøke sammenhengen mellom lærerens undervisning der bruk av skriveramme inngår, og elevtekster i et skriveprosjekt i en 8. klasse i samfunnsfag. Skriveprosessen er studert og beskrevet gjennom observasjonsnotater og video-opptak, og elevenes tekster er samlet inn som sluttprodukt og tolket i lys av prosesssen rundt skriverammen. Med utgangspunkt i måten skriverammen er realisert i elevenes tekster, kan tekstene sorteres i fire kategorier: 1) Rammen er integrert, 2) Rammen er uthevet, 3) Rammen overskrides og 4) Ingen ramme. Gjennom å sammenligne tekster der rammen ikke synes å ha hatt betydning for tekstskapingen, kategori 4, med de andre kategoriene, diskuteres rammens støtte både ut fra skrivepedagogisk og historiefaglig perspektiv. Undersøkelsen av tekstene i de tre første kategoriene tyder på skriverammen har fungert som støtte, ikke bare i forbindelse med tekstoppbygging, men også som en katalysator for innholdsgenerering og faglig forståelse. Bruk av rigide rammer i skriveopplæringen er kritisert for å fremme en instrumentell og sjangerformalistisk skrivepedagogikk kjennetegnet av reproduksjon og imitasjon av tekstmønstre. Dette ser her ut til å motvirkes av lærerens innramming av skriverammen i en skriveprosess som er kjennetegnet av sterk lærerstyring, steg-for-steg-metodikk og gjennomgående dialog mellom lærer og elever.Nøkkelord: fagspesifikk literacy, literacydidaktikk, skriving i samfunnsfag, skriverammeAbstractTeaching form and the use of models are frequently discussed as a means of supporting school writing instruction. This study investigates the relation between teaching which incorporates the use of writing frames and student texts produced in a writing project conducted in a 8th grade Social Studies classes in a Norwegian lower secondary school. The writing process is examined and described based on observation notes and video observations. The students’ final text products are collected and analyzed in light of the process surrounding the use of the writing frame. The texts are sorted into four categories, according to how the writing frame is utilized: 1) Integrated frame, 2) Emphasized frame, 3) Exceeded frame and 4) No frame. By comparing the texts from category 4, where the writing frame seems to have no significance for the text form, with the other categories, the writing frame as scaffolding is discussed both from the perspectives of teaching writing and teaching subject content. The examination of the texts in categories 1-3 indicates that the writing frame has functioned as scaffolding, not only connected to text structure, but also as a catalyst for the understanding and production of the subject matter. The use of rigid frames in writing instruction has been criticized for promoting an instrumental and formalistic writing pedagogy, characterized by reproduction and imitation. In this case, these effects seem to be counteracted by incorporating the writing frame in a writing process where the teacher strongly but gradually guides the students in a continuously dialogical manner.Key words: disciplinary literacy, literacy didactics, writing in Social Studies, writing frame


Author(s):  
Steve Graham ◽  
Amy Gillespie Rouse ◽  
Karen R. Harris

This article examines scientifically supported writing practices (SSWPs) and what instructional research tells us about the teaching of writing to school-aged students. It first explains why teachers should apply SSWPs before considering writing practices based on the insights and experience of professional writers and teachers, along with their limitations. It then describes writing practices based on scientific evidence and outlines three reasons why SSWPs are important to writing instruction and should become central to everyday writing practices. Twenty SSWPs that provide teachers with a variety of tools for improving students’ writing are analyzed; these SSWPs also provide a framework for a writing program that addresses six principles. The article concludes with a discussion of two basic theories that have dominated much of the discussion about how writing develops: The first takes into account how context shapes writing development, and the second emphasizes the role of cognition and motivation.


2021 ◽  
pp. 074108832110055
Author(s):  
Mary Ryan ◽  
Maryam Khosronejad ◽  
Georgina Barton ◽  
Lisa Kervin ◽  
Debra Myhill

Writing requires a high level of nuanced decision-making related to language, purpose, audience, and medium. Writing teachers thus need a deep understanding of language, process, and pedagogy, and of the interface between them. This article draws on reflexivity theory to interrogate the pedagogical priorities and perspectives of 19 writing teachers in primary classrooms across Australia. Data are composed of teacher interview transcripts and nuanced time analyses of classroom observation videos. Findings show that teachers experience both enabling and constraining conditions that emerge in different ways in different contexts. Enablements include high motivations to teach writing and a reflective and collaborative approach to practice. However, constraints were evident in areas of time management, dominance of teacher talk, teachers’ scope and confidence in their knowledge and practice, and a perceived lack of professional support for writing pedagogy. The article concludes with recommendations for a reflexive approach to managing these emergences in the teaching of writing.


Author(s):  
Susanne Gannon ◽  
Jennifer Dove

AbstractIn secondary schools, English teachers are often made responsible for writing results in national testing. Yet there have been few studies that focussed on this key group, or on how pedagogical practices have been impacted in the teaching of writing in their classrooms. This study investigated practices of English teachers in four secondary schools across different states, systems and regions. It developed a novel method of case study at a distance that required no classroom presence or school visits for the researchers and allowed a multi-sited and geographically dispersed design. Teachers were invited to select classroom artefacts pertaining to the teaching of writing in their English classes, compile individualised e-portfolios and reflect on these items in writing and in digitally conducted interviews, as well as elaborating on their broader philosophies and feelings about the teaching of writing. Despite and sometimes because of NAPLAN, these teachers held strong views on explicit teaching of elements of writing, but approached these in different ways. The artefacts that they created animated their teaching practices, connected them to their students and their subject, suggested both the pressure of externally driven homogenising approaches to writing and the creative individualised responses of skilled teachers within their unique contexts. In addition to providing granular detail about pedagogical practices in the teaching of writing in the NAPLAN era, the contribution of this paper lies in its methodological adaptation of case study at a distance through teacher-curated artefact portfolios that enabled a deep dive into individual teachers’ practices.


2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 37
Author(s):  
Andrea Baer

A Review of: Schwegler, R. A., and Shamoon, L. K. (1982). The aims and process of the research paper. College English, 44(8), 817-824. Objectives – This classic article discusses research-based writing assignments. Schwegler and Shamoon sought to identify differences between college students’ and college instructors’ conceptions of research and research paper assignments, particularly in terms of their purpose and process. The authors also sought to identify common features of academic research writing that could inform writing instruction about research writing. Design – Qualitative interviews with college instructors and students about their views of the research process and about forms of research writing. Instructors were also interviewed about evaluation standards for academic research papers. Setting – Unspecified, though the description suggests a college or university in the United States. Subjects – College instructors and college students. (Number of subjects unspecified.) Methods – The authors, a university writing program director and a writing program instructor, conducted one-on-one interviews with college instructors and students about their views of research and the research paper. Questions focused on conceptions of the research process, the purposes of research, and the forms that research writing takes. Instructors were also asked about standards for effective evaluation of research papers. The limited description of the research methods and interview questions employed in this study hinder the ability to critically assess its validity and reliability. Potential limitations of the study, such as selection bias or unclear wording of interview questions, cannot be adequately assessed based on the provided information. The authors also do not identify limitations of their study. As is discussed in more detail in this review’s commentary, the study does not conform to the conventions of most research studies from the behavioral, health, physical, and social sciences. The authors’ methods, however, may be better understood in light of particular disciplinary approaches and debates in Composition Studies. Main Results – Interviewees’ responses illustrated notable differences between college instructors’ and college students’ conceptions of the process, purpose, forms, and audiences of research paper assignments. While instructors understood the research paper to be argumentative, analytical, and interpretive, students generally described it as informative and factual. Students, when asked why research papers are assigned, identified purposes such as learning more about a topic, demonstrating one’s knowledge, or learning to use the library. Instructors indicated that the purpose of the research paper includes testing a theory, building on previous research, and exploring a problem that has been presented by other research or events (p. 819). At the same time, most instructors described research as an ongoing pursuit of “an elusive truth” (p. 819), rather than as primarily factual in nature. According to Schwegler and Shamoon, instructors also indicated during interviews that research and writing involve a clear though complex pattern that is evident in the structure and conventions of research papers. For example, the research process usually begins with activities like reading, note-taking, identifying problems with and gaps in current research, and conversing with colleagues. These instructors also reported that writing conventions which are implicitly understood in their fields are used by other scholars to evaluate their peers’ work. Reflecting on these interview responses, Schwegler and Shamoon suggest that pedagogical approaches to writing instruction can be informed both by acknowledging disparities in students’ and instructors’ conceptions of research and by identifying shared characteristics of academic writing. The authors therefore make several general observations about the nature of professional research papers and describe the structure and conventions of academic research papers. They conclude that the structure of scholarly research papers across the disciplines reflects the research process. Such a paper opens with identification of a research problem and a review of current knowledge and is followed by a variation of four possible patterns: 1) Review of research, 2) Application or implementation of a theory, 3) Refute, refine, or replicate prior research, and 4) Testing a hypothesis ( pp. 822-823). Schwegler and Shamoon indicate that the key features of scholars’ writings are also apparent in student research papers which instructors evaluate as highly-ranked and absent in lower-ranked papers. Furthermore, they provide an appendix that outlines the essential textual features of a research paper (Appendix A) (p. 822). It is unclear, however, if these descriptions of scholarly research writing are based on the instructor interviews or on other sources, such as previous analytical studies or an analysis of academic research papers from various disciplines. The researchers do not articulate the specific methods used to arrive at their generalizations. Conclusion – The authors conclude that students’ and instructors’ differing conceptions of the research process and the research paper have important implications for writing instruction. Many of the interviewed instructors described research as involving methods that are quite different from those needed for most research paper assignments. The discrepancies between class assignments and academics’ approaches to research suggests that differences in instructors’ and students’ views of research often are not addressed in the design of research paper assignments. Instructors who teach the research paper should ensure that the purpose, structure, and style of assignments reflect what content-area instructors will expect from students. Schwegler and Shamoon argue that because the basic conventions of the research paper generally apply across disciplines, instruction about those conventions can be integrated into composition courses and lower-level undergraduate courses. Such an approach can assist students in better understanding and approaching research writing as would a scholar in the given discipline.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 112
Author(s):  
Aridah Aridah ◽  
Haryanto Atmowardoyo ◽  
Kisman Salija

The discrepancy between students’ preferences and teacher practices for feedback on writing has created difficulty on the side of teachers and confusion on the side of the students. What teachers believe and practice as effective feedback for students may not be the one that students perceive as useful and effective feedback for them. This paper investigates the types of written feedback preferred by the students and the types of feedback provided by the teachers on students’ writing. This study employed a survey design which involved 54 students and 22 teachers using convenience sampling technique. The instrument used in collecting data was a questionnaire in the form of Feedback Scale. The results showed that there were some points of compatibility between students’ preferences and teachers’ practices and some other points were incompatible. The data showed that both students and teachers preferred to have or to give direct feedback but the data also indicated that students liked to have more direct feedback than the teacher could provide. It was also found that the teachers provided more indirect feedback than the students expected to have. The students also preferred unfocused feedback to focused feedback. The findings of the study have crucial implications on writing instruction. There is a need to design writing instructions which accommodate both teachers’ practices and students’ preferences for written feddback. Based on the profile of students’ preference and teachers’ practices, a model of feedback provision in teaching writing is proposed. This model is called preference-based feedback on writing instruction.


2018 ◽  
Vol 120 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-60
Author(s):  
Juliet Michelsen Wahleithner

Background Numerous reports have highlighted problems with writing instruction in American schools, yet few examine the interplay of teachers’ preparation to teach writing, the instructional policies they must navigate, and the writing development of the students in their classrooms. Purpose This study examines high school English teachers’ instruction of writing while taking into account their preparation for teaching writing—both preservice and inservice, the instructional policies in place, and the learners in their classrooms. Setting Data used come from public high school English teachers teaching in Northern California. These data were collected in 2011–2012, when teachers were sill complying with the mandates of the No Child Left Behind legislation. Research Design I use year-long qualitative case studies of five high school English teachers to highlight various ways teachers used their knowledge of writing instruction to negotiate the pressures of accountability policies and their students’ needs as writers to teach writing. Data collected include beginning- and end-of-year interviews with each teacher, four sets of 1- to 2-day observations of each teacher's instruction of writing, and instructional documents related to each teacher's writing instruction. These data were analyzed using the constant comparative method to look for themes within the data collected from each teacher and then make comparisons across teachers. Findings from the case studies are supported by findings from a survey of 171 high school teachers who taught a representative sample of California high school students at 21 schools in 20 districts. The survey included 41 multiple-choice items that asked about teachers’ instructional practices and their perceptions of high-stakes accountability pressures and their students as writers. Survey data were analyzed quantitatively using descriptive statistics and principal components analysis. Findings Findings illustrate that significant differences existed in how the five teachers approached their writing instruction. These differences were due to both the teachers’ varied preparations to teach writing and the contextual factors in place where each taught. Those teachers with more developed knowledge of writing instruction were better able to navigate the policies in place at their sites and more equipped to plan appropriate instruction to develop their students as writers. Recommendations Findings indicate teachers would be better served by opportunities to develop their knowledge of writing instruction both prior to and once they begin their teaching careers. Additionally, the findings add to an existing body of research that demonstrates the limiting effect high-stakes assessments can have on teachers’ instruction of writing.


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