|
A recent meta-analysis (Gersten & Baker,
1999) highlights research-based instructional approaches for teaching
written expression to students with learning disabilities, including ways
to teach students how to analyze material learned in the classroom and
how to write personal narratives, persuasive essays, and other genres.
All of the instructional interventions studied improved the quality of
students' written products, and there was evidence of positive impact
on students' self-efficacy, i.e., their senses of being able to write.
Expressive writing was defined as writing
for the purpose of displaying knowledge or supporting self- expression
(Graham & Harris, 1989a). This analysis asked, "Given a group of studies
designed explicitly for the purpose of improving the writing of students
with learning disabilities, which interventions and components were found
to be most effective, and what is the strength of their effects?" This
definition and research question led the analysis to include studies of
a various interventions.
Virtually all of the interventions studied
were multifaceted. Three components stood out as ones that reliably and
consistently led to improved outcomes in teaching expressive writing to
students with learning disabilities:
* Adhering to a basic framework of planning, writing,
and revision;
* Explicitly teaching critical steps in the writing
process and
* Providing feedback guided by the information explicitly
taught.
ADHERING TO A BASIC FRAMEWORK OF PLANNING,
WRITING, AND REVISION
Teaching students to write requires showing
them how to develop and organize what they want to say and guiding them
in the process of getting it down on paper. Most of the interventions
used a basic framework based on planning, writing, and revising. These
steps are part of a recursive, rather than linear, process, i.e., each
step may be revisited during the writing process, and the steps do not
always proceed in the same order. In these studies, each step was taught
explicitly, with several examples and often supported by a "think sheet,"
a prompt card, or a mnemonic.
Planning. Well-developed plans for writing
result in better first drafts. Teachers or peers who write well can verbalize
the process they go through to help students develop their own "plans
of action." One type of plan of action, called a "Planning Think Sheet,"
uses a series of sequential, structured prompts. It specifies a topic
and asks the questions, "Who (am I writing for)?," "Why am I writing?,"
"What do I know?," "How can I group my ideas?" and "How will I organize
my ideas?" (Englert, Raphael & Anderson, 1992). Another technique
is to use semantic mapping to help students plan their writing.
Creating a first draft. Using a plan of
action helps students create first drafts. The plan serves as a concrete
map for engaging in the writing process and provides students with suggestions
for what to do when they feel "stuck." The plan of action provides a permanent
reminder of the content and structure of the writing task.
A well-developed plan of action also gives
the student and teacher a common language to use in discussing the writing.
The dialogue between teacher and student represents a major advance in
writing instruction over traditional methods that required students to
work in relative isolation.
Revising and editing. Revising and editing
skills are critical to the writing process. Developing methods to help
students refine and edit their work has been difficult, but a few researchers
have begun to develop specific strategies that appear promising. For example,
Wong, Butler, Ficzere, and Kuperis (1996), in teaching students to write
opinion essays, used peer editing as an instructional strategy for the
students. Pairs of students alternated their roles as student-writer and
student-critic. The student-critic identified ambiguities in the essay
and asked the writer for clarification. With help from the teacher, the
students made revisions. The teacher also provided the student-writer
with feedback on clarity and on the cogency of the supportive arguments.
Once the clarity and cogency of the essay met the teacher's standard,
the pair moved on to correct capitalization, spelling, and punctuation.
Through this process, the student- writer had to explain his or her communicative
intent to the peer and revise the essay to faithfully reflect it. These
clarifying interactive dialogues led the student-critic and student-writer
to understand each other's perspective. In this way the trainees developed
a sense of audience for their writing.
EXPLICITLY TEACHING CRITICAL STEPS IN THE
WRITING PROCESS
Explicitly teaching text structures provides
a guide for the writing task, whether it is a persuasive essay, a personal
narrative, or an essay comparing and contrasting two phenomena. Different
types of writing are based on different structures. For example, a persuasive
essay contains a thesis and supporting arguments, while narrative writing
may contain character development and a story climax. Instruction in text
structures typically includes numerous explicit models and prompts. Although
different writers may proceed with the structures in a different order,
good writing involves what Englert & Mariage (1991) called "overlapping
and recursive processes." These processes do not proceed in a particular
order, and one process may inform another in such a way that the author
returns to previous steps to update or revise on a regular basis. Again,
a plan of action is helpful. The plan makes text structures more visible
to students and helps to demystify the writing process.
PROVIDING FEEDBACK GUIDED BY THE INFORMATION
EXPLICITLY TAUGHT
A third component common to these successful
interventions was frequent feedback to students on the overall quality
of writing, missing elements, and strengths. When feedback is combined
with instruction in the writing process, the dialogue between student
and teacher is strengthened. Giving and receiving feedback also helps
students to develop "reader sensitivity" and their own writing style.
Wong et al. (1997) hypothesized that interactive
dialogues, which led students through multiple cycles of reflection, realization,
and redress of problems, helped students "see" their thoughts and write
from another's perspective. Across the studies of successful writing instruction,
teachers and students had an organizational framework and language to
use in providing feedback on such aspects of writing as organization,
originality, and interpretation. Wong and her colleagues modeled procedures,
for students and teachers, providing feedback so that they would attend
to the surface features of writing (e.g., spelling and punctuation) as
well as to the presentation of ideas.
SPECIFIC METHODS
Numerous methods for teaching written
expression incorporate these three common principles. Two examples are
Self-Regulated Strategy Development (SRSD) (Graham & Harris, 1989b)
and Cognitive Strategy Instruction in Writing (Englert et al., 1995; Englert
& Mariage, 1991).
The SRSD technique involves self-directed
prompts that require the students to (a) consider their audience and reasons
for writing, (b) develop a plan for what they intend to say using frames
to generate or organize writing notes; (c) evaluate possible content by
considering its impact on the reader; and (d) continue the process of
content generation and planning during the act of writing.
Cognitive Strategy Instruction in Writing
includes brainstorming strategies for preparing to write, organizing strategies
to relate and categorize the ideas, comprehension strategies as students
read and gather information for their writing, and monitoring strategies
as they clarify their thoughts and the relationships among their items
of information. All of these strategies are applied prior to the actual
writing.
EMERGING ISSUES IN WRITING INSTRUCTION FOR
STUDENTS WITH LEARNING DISABILITIES
Gersten and Baker (1999) identify some
issues in which research is expected to blossom in coming years. The first
group of issues concerns the mechanics versus the content of writing.
Early evidence suggested that writing instruction that focused more on
content would better capitalize on the strengths of students with learning
disabilities. When asked to write about complex ideas, students with learning
disabilities often showed conceptual performance beyond that which would
be expected on the basis of their performance on lower-level skills such
as capitalization, punctuation and spelling (Goldman, Hasselbring, &
The Cognition Technology Group at Vanderbilt, 1977).
More recent research indicates that dictating
to a scribe can eliminate mechanical difficulties and result in a longer,
higher-quality composition (e.g., De La Paz & Graham, 1997). While
students must eventually learn to do their own writing, these findings
suggest a possible bridge to higher performance.
Gersten and Baker point out that daily
writing instruction should include time devoted to both the mechanics
and the process of writing. Problems with the mechanics of writing must
be addressed in expressive writing instruction; there is a reciprocal
relationship between mastery of transcription skills and growth in the
quality of writing. When students have mastered the mechanics, their cognitive
resources can be devoted to planning, composing, and revising their work.
According to Gersten and Baker, another
issue that is likely to be the focus of expressive writing research is
the transfer of writing skills and the spontaneous use of the strategies
involved in writing to other subject matter areas to raise the student's
overall level of academic achievement. In the meta-analysis reported here,
few investigated the transfer of writing skills. Those that did found
mixed results. Wong called for instruction to promote transfer of skill.
When students are provided such opportunities, she says, transfer will
be greatly enhanced.
Based on Teaching Expressive Writing To
Students With Learning Disabilities: A Meta-Analysis by Russell Gersten
and Scott Baker, 1999.
|