State of the Art: Reading - November 1993
9. Children's reading and writing abilities
develop together.
Historical and cross-cultural evidence suggests that literacy in a
society might entail reading and writing as separate or related entities
(Clifford 1989). We believe strongly that in our society, at this point
in history, reading and writing, to be understood and appreciated fully,
should be viewed together, learned together, and uses together.
(Tierney and Shannahan 1991, p. 275)
Both reading and writing are constructive processes (Pearson and Tierney
1984). A similar, if not the same, level of intellectual activity
underlies both reading and writing: interactions between the
reader/writer and text lead to new knowledge and interpretations of text
(Langer 1986; Martin 1987). Just as thoughtful readers read for a
specific purpose by activating prior knowledge about the topic at hand,
writers activate prior knowledge that relates to the
topic and have a purpose for writing--to impart meaning to a reader.
While reading, readers reread and modify meaning accordingly. While
writing, writers think about the topic and the more they think, the
better developed their writing becomes. They also think about what
they've written, reread it, and make revisions to improve it.
Lastly, readers finalize the meaning they have constructed so far.
Writers do likewise: they settle on their final composition.
The processes of reading and writing not only unfold in similar ways,
they tend to be used together. This is natural because in everyday life
reading and writing frequently occur together. For example, a person
receives a letter--via the postal service or electronic mail--reads it,
then answers it in writing, perhaps rereading portions of the letter
while constructing the response. Moreover, learning about reading and
writing takes place in a social context that contains written language
and where people use and talk about written language.
When reading and writing are taught together the benefits are greater
than when they are taught separately. Research (Tierney and Shannahan
1991) has begun to show that writing leads to improved reading
achievement, reading leads to better writing performance, and combined
instruction leads to improvements in both areas. Moreover, research
(McGinley and Tierney 1989) has shown that engaging learners in the
greater variety of experiences provided when reading and writing
instruction are combined leads to a higher level of thinking than when
either process is taught alone. Since thinking is a critical part of
meaning construction, students will become better thinkers if they are
taught in classrooms where meaning is actively constructed through
reading and writing. Teachers can be most effective in helping students
to become better readers, writers, and thinkers when they weave
integrated reading and writing activities into their
literacy instruction.
--- GEcho 1.11+
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* Origin: The South Bay Forum - Olympia, WA (360) 923-0866 (1:352/256)
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