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The "Write Stuff" For Preventing and Treating Disabilities
by Virginia Berninger, Professor of Educational Psychology, University of Washington, Seattle
Written language disabilities are extremely prevalent in the population of children with learning
disabilities. Reading disabilities might be identified sooner than writing disabilities in many children, but
writing disabilities are more persistent. Public concern and public awareness are on the rise. Now that states
are expected to be accountable for students learning, and many have instituted a statewide assessment of
writing competence, both educators and parents are concerned about the large number of children whose writing
skills are below standard. In this educational climate, students with writing disabilities are much more
likely to be noticed.
The University of Washington research program on writing disabilities, which has been funded by the National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development since 1989, has discovered two kinds of writing disabilities.
One group has initial trouble learning to read; the children respond well to instruction, but have persistent
problems with writing. One of these children commented to this author, "OK, so now you cured my dyslexia; now
what are you going to do about my dysgraphia?" For many other children, writing problems develop even though
they learned to read quite easily. Educators or parents may mistakenly attribute specific writing disabilities
to lack of motivation or effort. However, appropriate assessment often reveals one of several reasons for
writing difficulty:
a) underdeveloped spelling, handwriting or composing skills, singly or in combination; b) processing
problems related to handwriting, spelling and composition to included orthographic or phonological coding,
fine motor planning, automatic letter retrieval and production, working memory, and so forth; or, c)
attention deficit disorder. In addition, some children have simply not had a program of coordinated, explicit
instruction in all the component skills needed to develop a functional writing system.
The University of Washington research program is being conducted in three phases. In the first phase, we
designed a large-scale assessment to validate the components of writing disabilities and the processes that
are functionally related to each of these components. This work has provided the conceptual foundation for the
Process Assessment for the Learner (PAL) test, which the Psychological Corporation is developing and norming
on the same sample as the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children and the Wechsler Individual Achievement
Test. The PAL diagnostic will be available, along with the WIAT-II, in 2001. It will provide an improved
assessment system for conducting research and doing clinical evaluations of writing disabilities. In
the second phase of the research, we focused on early intervention to prevent writing difficulties and
long-term intervention to treat serious writing disabilities. A hallmark of this phase of the research is that
intervention is aimed at both low-level and high-level cognitive and linguistic skills in the same
instructional session to create a functional writing system. For example, whenever handwriting or spelling is
taught, children compose in the same instructional session.
When time permits, instruction is aimed at all levels of language in the same instructional session: the
subword level (phonological awareness, letter formation and orthographic awareness): the word level (multiple
strategies for connecting spoken and written words while spelling); and, text level (constructing sentences
and discourse). The guide recently written for parents and educators with these instructional strategies is
Process Assessment for the Learner (PAL); Guides for Intervention (Berninger, 1998).
In the third phase, we continue to evaluate instructional interventions. However, we have added projects in
our Multidisciplinary Learning Disabilities Center, also funded by NICHD, that a) evaluate the effectiveness
of teacher training on student learning outcomes, b) investigate the genetics of subtypes of writing
disabilities, and c) image the brains of students with and without writing disabilities. The following is a
brief summary of our findings to date.
Handwriting Automaticity Once children have been introduced to letter formation, they must learn
to retrieve and produce letters automatically. Handwriting automaticity, which is assessed by the number of
letters written correctly within a brief time limit, is a strong predictor of the quality of composition in
normally developing and disabled writers. If letter production is automatic, memory space is freed up for
higher level composing processes, such as deciding what to write about, what to say and how to say it.
Although many people believe that writing is primarily a motor process, our research supports a different
point of view: writing is a written language process. The intactness of fine motor skills alone does not
account for handwriting problems as much as the ability to code an identified language symbol (letter) in
memory.
To help struggling writers put letter retrieval and production on automatic pilot, we ask them to study a
model letter with numbered arrow cues and then to follow those cues as they write the letter. We then ask
children to write letters from memory to help them create retrieval routines. We gradually increase the time
interval between when the child looks at the letter and when she tries to write it from memory. During each
teaching trial, we name the letters at least three times: when children are asked to study the numbered arrow
cues, when they are asked to cover each letter and when they are asked to write each letter from memory. In
contrast to the practice of asking children to write similar letters over and over, we ask children to study
and write all 26 letters of the alphabet in each instructional session. To avoid brain habituation, which is
common when tasks do not vary sufficiently, children are usually asked to write each of the 26 letters only
once in a practice session. Recycling through the alphabet might be done a second or third time, but never
more than that.
Spelling Spelling is harder to remediate than handwriting automaticity or composition. Our genetic
studies have found two abilities that are most likely to be inherited are written spelling and repetition of
spoken pseudo-words. When written spelling has improved significantly in children, associated improvement in
pseudo-word repetition also has occurred, suggesting that the ability to process the sound structure of spoken
words is common to both tasks. Several traditional approaches to word study were not sufficient for improving
the spelling of children with learning difficulties, including the method of looking at the word, memorizing
the letter sequence, covering the word and writing it from memory. Learning to spell requires linking the
spoken word to the written word, not simply visual memorization. The following instructional strategies have
resulted in significant gains in the children we study: 1. Children need to understand that the sound
structure of words is related to the structure of written words, although not always in a perfect way.
Phonological awareness training should be part of spelling instruction. For one-syllable words, children can
play games in which they delete or substitute sounds in words. For words with more than one syllable, students
can hold up a finger for each syllable and then use colored tokens to represent phonemes in each syllable. In
cases in which syllable boundaries in the spoken word vary or are ambiguous, the teacher should tell the
students that the relationship between speech and print can be "messy." Students may need to be reminded that
the number of phonemes is often not the same as the number of letters, because we use letter groups and
patterns to represent sounds. 2. Children need to understand that letters and letter combinations are
used to translate units in the spoken word to units in the written word. Functional spelling units are usually
one or two letters in size (ph, oa and ng are two-letter functional units; A Talking Letters Pictionary helps
children learn the sound-letter correspondences). Consonant and vowel correspondences are taught separately,
organized by the syllable types. Phoneme-spelling correspondences differ in degree of predictability (number
of possibilities for the same sound) and children are taught that spelling is predictable even though the
correspondences vary. Children who learned the associations for the two-letter spelling units made the most
progress learning to spell and recognize words. Two other strategies were helpful: a) saying the names of the
letters in the word and then saying the whole word; and, b) pairing the sounds and spellings of the onset of a
syllable with the sounds and spellings of the rime part of the syllable (e.g., thr + ill). 3.
Children need repeated practice writing specific words to dictation. Exclusive reliance on incidental
instruction during the "teachable moment" or use of personal dictionaries with entries for the words most
commonly used in compositions is not sufficient for children at risk. A minimum of 24 practice trials,
distributed over a two-month period, was needed for at-risk second graders to achieve short-term mastery of
spelling specific words. 4. Training also needs to be given for words that contain permissible
alternative spelling units for a given sound that depend on a specific word context and for schwa syllables
(indistinct, unaccented syllables that need to be memorized because they cannot be sounded out, such as the
a's in Philadelphia).
Composition Self-directed journal writing is ineffective with students who lack skills for text
generation. Because planning is difficult for beginning writers in general, and especially so for students
with writing problems, many children need guided assistance in the form of prompts. Three kinds of prompts
make planning easier: a) composition starters, b) teacher queries such as, "What else can you think of?" and,
c) prompts for eliciting one of the 21 self-instruction cues we teach children that will help them generate
the next sentence. Graphic organizers for both narratives and exposition are useful to help struggling writers
plan what to write. Also helpful is explicit modeling of composition in which the teacher thinks aloud, using
a chart or overhead transparency, while planning, generating and revising the text produced. Children
also benefit from being taught specific self-regulations strategies. Two are especially helpful. The first was
suggested by Jenifer Katahira, a master teacher who specializes in integrated reading and writing instruction.
Students are taught to say, "What I think I can say, what I say I can write." The teacher models this process
using sound-keyword-spelling cards (Talking Letters in our program) to translate what I can say into what I
can write. The students then apply the strategy on their own. The second strategy is PWRR: plan, write,
review, revise, which are steps that are constantly rehearsed and reinforced. All of our composition
instruction emphasizes writing for a real audience; therefore, compositions are shared with either the tutor
or peers in small groups.
Coordinating the Components of the Functional Writing System Many component processes need to be
coordinated to write a composition, just as many instruments in the orchestra need to be synchronized to
produce a symphony. We begin each lesson with a warm-up to practice handwriting and\or spelling. We liken this
warm-up to the athlete who stretches before running or the musician who tunes and plays scales before
performing. Handwriting and spelling are presented as tools for communicating ideas. Kris Begay, one of our
tutors, puts it this way: "Training transcription skills is like giving an artist a box of paints; he needs
the tools for creative work." We then focus on planning, generating, reviewing, and revising text. Our
children have improved significantly in handwriting, spelling and composition when low-level transcription is
transferred seamlessly to high-level composing within the same lessons.
Much work remains to be done to ensure that writing disabilities are appropriately identified, diagnosed and
treated. Our work to date suggests that writing disabilities, like reading disabilities, are to large to
extent preventable, although some may require life-long treatment and accommodation.
Acknowledgements: This research has been supported by Grant Nos. 25858-09 and P50 33812-03 from
NICHD. My co-investigator for the last decade has been Robert D. Abbott. The numerous other faculty and
graduate students at the University of Washington and colleagues elsewhere who have contributed to this work
are acknowledged in the PAL Intervention Guides (Berninger, 1998).
About the Author: Virginia Berninger is professor of educational psychology, University of
Washington, Seattle, WA; principal investigator of NICHD grants on writing intervention, and director of a
multidisciplinary learning disabilities center on biological and educational links to learning disabilities.
References:
- Berninger, V., 1998. Process Assessment for the Learner: Guides for Intervention. San Antonio, TX:
Psychological Corporation. 1-800-211-8378. (Intervention Kit contains Handwriting Automaticity Program with
Composition Starters and Talking Letter teacher guide and student cards).
- Berninger, V., 1998. Assessment, Prevention, and Intervention for Specific Reading and Writing
Disabilities in Young Children. Learning About Learning Disabilities, 2nd Edition In B. Wong, ed., New York:
Academic Press, pp. 529-555.
- Harris, K. & Graham, S., 1992. Helping Young Writers Master the Craft: Strategy Instruction and
Self-Regulation in the Writing Process. Cambridge, MA: Brookline Books.
- Moats, L.C., 1995. Spelling: Development, Disability, and Instruction. Baltimore, MD: York Press.
� Copyright 1999, The International Dyslexia Association (IDA). IDA encourages the reproduction and
distribution of this article, if proper credit is given in the following manner: Reprinted with permission
from The International Dyslexia Association quarterly newsletter, Perspectives, date/issue number/author.
Articles must be copied/reprinted in their entirety (no edits), unless specific permission has been
granted. Articles cannot be reprinted for the purpose of resale.
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