Writing and drawing produced by children 28-53 months old were compared. Israeli and Dutch preschoolers were asked to draw and write, to classify their products as drawing and writing, and to decide what they had drawn or written. Israeli and Dutch mothers classified the products. Scores on a scale for writing composed of graphic, "writing-like," and symbolic schemes showed improvement with age. Recognition of drawings as drawings preceded recognition of writings as writings. Scores on writing and drawing were substantially correlated, even with age partialed out, suggesting (a) that when children start drawing objects referentially, they write by drawing "print" and (b) that progress in object drawing involves progress in drawing print, so that their writing becomes more writing-like. Children unable to communicate meaning by writing spontaneously resort to drawing-like devices, indicating the primacy of drawing as a representational-communicative system.
This longitudinal study examined the relationship between kindergarten word writing and
grade 1 literacy in a large sample of Israeli children. In kindergarten, a majority of children
produced writing which displayed most of the graphospatial characteristics of conventional word
writing, although only one-third of the children demonstrated a working knowledge of the
alphabetic principle. Kindergarten writing significantly predicted variance in all three measures
of grade 1 literacy (decoding, spelling, and reading comprehension), even after controlling for
general intelligence. We also investigated the role of alphabetic skills and socioliteracy variables
in accounting for the predictive power of kindergarten writing. Kindergarten alphabetic skills
(phonemic awareness and knowledge of letter names), but not socioliteracy factors (parental print
exposure, parents' reading to child, and Clay's Concepts about Print), explained all
the variance contributed by kindergarten writing to grade 1 decoding and spelling. In the case of
reading comprehension, both alphabetic and socioliteracy variables were able to account for the
predictive power of kindergarten writing. As a precursor of reading comprehension, kindergarten
writing appears to reflect both domain-specific alphabetic skills and broader socioliteracy factors
underlying the higher order cognitive competencies essential for comprehending text.
The development of children's writing of their own names as compared to their writing of dictated words was examined on samples of children ranging from 2 to 5 years of age, who were immersed in Hebrew or Dutch and recruited from low to high socioeconomic status families. Analyses were based on four data sets collected in three studies. From a young age, children wrote their name on a higher level than they wrote other words, and name writing improved with age more rapidly than word writing across the whole age range. Furthermore, the intercorrelations between word writings, corrected for age, were generally higher than the correlation between word and name writing, indicating that children exhibit a unique approach to the writing of their own name, irrespective of other background variables. Children's advanced skill in writing their name may suggest that name writing promotes the development of writing in general.
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