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Developmental Trends: Writing at Different Age Levels (page 3)

By T. M McDevitt|J. E. Ormrod
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Diversity:

  • Better readers tend to be better writers, presumably because general language ability provides a foundation for both reading and writing.
  • Children with deficits in phonological awareness have a more difficult time learning to spell.
  • Girls show higher achievement in writing and spelling beginning in the elementary years.
  • Children with dyslexia often have poor handwriting skills.

Implications:

  • Engage children in authentic writing activities (e.g., writing letters to relatives, creating a newsletter).
  • Provide regular practice in spelling, grammar, and punctuation (often within authentic activities).
  • Explore various ways in which particular phonemes and phoneme combinations are spelled in the English language.
  • Introduce expository forms of writing (e.g., descriptions, lab reports).
  • Build opportunities for editing into the schedule; offer suggestions about how children can improve their writing.

Early Adolescence (10–14)

What You Might Observe:

  • Automatized spelling of most common words
  • Increasing use of expository forms of writing
  • Use of longer and more complex syntactic structures
  • Reluctance to edit and revise unless strongly encouraged to do so

Diversity:

  • Some older children and adolescents (e.g., those with learning disabilities) may have exceptional difficulty with spelling and sentence structure.
  • Some adolescents write often in their spare time (e.g., keeping diaries, writing notes to friends), whereas others write only when required to do so at school.

Implications:

  • Provide continuing instruction in spelling, punctuation, and grammar. • Introduce persuasive and argumentative forms of writing.
  • Suggest a specific audience for whom to write.
  • Give feedback on first drafts, including guidance on how to improve clarity and cohesiveness.
  • Encourage adolescents to use local dialects in creative writing projects.

Late Adolescence (14–18)

What You Might Observe:

  • Ability to write about a particular topic in depth
  • More organized and cohesive essays
  • Increasing tendency to knowledge-transform rather than knowledge-tell
  • More revisions than at younger ages, but with a focus on superficial rather than substantive problems

Diversity:

  • Individuals with learning disabilities may focus largely on mechanics (spelling, use of correct grammar, etc.) while writing, perhaps because such skills are not yet automatized.
  • Individuals from some cultural backgrounds (e.g., those from some East Asian countries) may be reluctant to put their thoughts on paper unless they are certain that they are correct.

Implications:

  • Assign and scaffold lengthy writing projects.
  • Teach specific strategies for organizing and synthesizing ideas.
  • Show examples of effective writing (e.g., writing that illustrates knowledge transforming).
  • For teens who have language-based learning disabilities, downplay the importance of correct spelling and grammar when evaluating written work; teach strategies for overcoming or compensating for weaknesses.
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