A random sample of primary grade teachers from across the United States was surveyed about their instructional practices in handwriting. Nine out of every ten teachers indicated that they taught handwriting, averaging 70 minutes of instruction per week. Only 12% of teachers, however, indicated that the education courses taken in college adequately prepared them to teach handwriting. Despite this lack of formal preparation, the majority of teachers used a variety of recommended instructional practices for teaching handwriting. The application of such practices, though, was applied unevenly, raising concerns about the quality of handwriting instruction for all children.
Mastering sentence-construction skills is essential to learning to write. Limited sentence-construction skills may hinder a writer's ability to translate ideas into text. It may also inhibit or interfere with other composing processes, as developing writers must devote considerable cognitive effort to sentence construction. The authors examined whether instruction designed to improve sentence-construction skills was beneficial for more and less skilled 4th-grade writers. In comparison with peers receiving grammar instruction, students in the experimental treatment condition became more adept at combining simpler sentences into more complex sentences. For the experimental students, the sentence-combining skills produced improved story writing as well as the use of these skills when revising.
Primary grade teachers randomly selected from across the United Sates completed a
survey (N = 168) that examined their instructional practices in
spelling and the types of adaptations they made for struggling spellers. Almost every
single teacher surveyed reported teaching spelling, and the vast majority of
respondents implemented a complex and multifaceted instructional program that applied
a variety of research-supported procedures. Although some teachers were sensitive to
the instructional needs of weaker spellers and reported making many different
adaptations for these students, a sizable minority of teachers (42%) indicated they
made few or no adaptations. In addition, the teachers indicated that 27% of their
students experienced difficulty with spelling, calling into question the
effectiveness of their instruction with these children.
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