I would agree that writing is expressive.  I am not so sure reading is 
receptive.  Of course, it starts out as receptive as the reader receives the 
input (the author's text).  BUT then I tend to believe it becomes 
expressive.  What happens in the reader's mind following, and during, the 
reading is a construction, albeit re-construction, of the author's message.  
I really do think it's worth considering that a child must read receptively, 
then expressively, and that's what comprehension is.  A thought....

 > Totally  different skills are involved in reading and writing,
 > although they
 > are  related.
 >
 >
 > Is this true?

Research shows that eading and writing are very closely connected. One
is receptive (reading) and the other is expressive (writing). However,
there can be no reading without the expression of someone's writing and
most writing is read. But beyond that, writing reinforces all the
skills needed in reading. It requires students to use phonemic
awareness, phonics and come to a recognition of standard written
conventions. There is a lot of research that shows that reading and
writing reinforce and extend each other including the work of Tim
Shanahan and Susan Neuman to name but a few.

Here's one quick example. If a teacher is doing a unit on or kids are
reading a particular author, they internalize the style of that author
and it's reflected in their writing. Kids who have been taught to read
using basals will often expressive themselves in "basalese" i.e. " I
see the dog. I see the cat. The dog can run. The cat can run. I have a
lot of examples gathered over the years that show this relationship. In
fact, by looking at a kid's writing, you can often tell what they've
been reading.


On the other hand, kids who have read or who have had stories read to
them will put on the style of that author.  I can remember laughing at
the writing of kids after a Robert Munsch unit in Ardie Cole's
classroom. Her first graders wrote like little Munsches. This happens
to adults too. I often find my thinking (my internal dialogue) shifting
to the style of an author I've just read-- so there's a kind of oral
language connection too!  There's a lot more to it than that, but
reading and writing skills so dovetail with each other that more
closely reading and writing are integrated, the stronger the literacy
development in the student.

Maria Ceprano and I did a really interesting research project using our
university students and first graders with whom they were penpals. We
analyzed the writing and we found we could document and trace back the
style of the university students' letters to the style of letters the
kids wrote. If a university student wrote a series of short sentences
and questions, in their letters,  that's what their penpal  did. If, on
the other hand the university student chatted about her life and asked
open ended questions. the first grader responded in kind. In other
words, they internalized the style of writing they were reading and
then translated that reading skill into their writing. We made several
tables that showed the connections as well as the growth in
conventional spelling over time.

Steve Krashen maintains that best way to help kids in spelling and
grammar skills is not by direct instruction, but through lots of
reading because they internalize the patterns and the conventions of
language. I myself, have a pretty good grasp of grammar and correct
written conventions but often I don't really know why something is
wrong. I just know that it is. There's a built in internal compass that
got there through lots of reading.

Usually, reading is slightly in advance of writing just as
understanding of spoken language usually develops in advance of the
ability to construct spoken language. This is true of second language
learners too. The receptive is easier to master than the expressive but
both are necessary and should be integrated rather than
compartmentalized. There is a ton of research that supports that
symbiotic relationship between reading and writing.

On Saturday, June 30, 2007, at 02:48 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 >
 >
 >
 > Nancy Creech
 >
 >
 >
 > ************************************** See what's free at
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