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Monday, March 18, 2024

Writing Makes Better Readers!

 SELI Young Writers Clubs demonstrate that process writing workshops adapted for English learners develop students’ reading, writing, listening, and speaking skills, which gives them the self-confidence to keep learning.

However, it is hard to find it stated in any other context that writing facilitates reading. People see it as the cart coming before the horse. I didn’t see this short article when it came out, so I will quote from it now:

“Gene Ouellette, an associate professor of psychology at Mount Allison University, and Monique Sénéchal, a psychology professor at Carleton University, have done a number of studies on how invented spelling plays into literacy acquisition. “What we’ve found over the years is there seemed to be something with kids who are doing invented spelling on their own that’s really helping them learn how to read,” said Ouellette in an interview. “I’d say it’s like the missing piece” in early literacy instruction.” Loewus, L. (May 5, 2017). “Invented Spelling Leads to Better Reading, Study Says.” Education Week online. 


Some of the reading groups to which SELI offers instructional support, administered a gap-fill or cloze exercise using an early chapter in their next book to get an approximate idea of each person’s reading level (you see two here, one in Lunsar and one in Dankawalie). In cloze exercises every fifth word is omitted, and the candidate supplies it or a reasonable substitute. What a wonderful realm with neither carts nor horses, just reading and writing as one activity!