Ok, so I'm going to show my age. I went to middle and high school in the 70's, 
and I have to disagree with your take on writing instruction at that time. I 
had to write at every grade. I attended public schools in Pennsylvania, 
Wisconsin, Ohio, and Connecticut. Writing was essential. Ok, it was not the 
writing workshop we have today, but I remember writing in school. I remember 
writing poetry, essays, narratives, reports, letters, etc. We wrote all the 
time. Maybe I was just lucky (I didn't think so at the time.)










Joy/NC/4
 
How children learn is as important as what they learn: process and content go 
hand in hand. http://www.responsiveclassroom.org
 

--- On Sun, 7/6/08, Beverlee Paul <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: Beverlee Paul <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [Understand] Reading/writing connection
To: [email protected]
Date: Sunday, July 6, 2008, 8:18 PM

to Jennifer, Joy, all - 
 
This may be as uninteresting to you all as it is fascinating to me, but I
finally remembered (having a "senior" brain is Hell) the name of the
giant reading/writing author (along with Stauffer, Hansen, Martin, etc.) that
has had a HUGE impact on me through the years - James Moffett.  He was so
revolutionary when he came out, but his influence deeply colored everything I
read through the 80s and 90s.  I'm sure his influence is what made the
early research by Sulzby and Teale in emergent literacy in the mid 80s take
hold and prepare the reading world for Don Holdaway, Marie Clay, etcetera.  He
certainly understood the reading/writing connection.  I haven't reread Jane
Hansen's When Writers Read lately, but it was written with such a common
sense brilliance, I'll bet it greatly impacted the giants of that time
Donald Murray, Donald Graves, etcetera.  Some of the early writing experts,
while certainly knowing writing inside and out, took a little longer to make
the connection to reading/writing.  Jane Hansen might have been one of the
first to articulately pull out the connection and give it to the writing world
as well as to the reading world.
 
I think that maybe the greatest lasting contribution of the Reading Wars will
be that noone, but noone, talks anymore about reading without talking about
writing, and pretty much the same thing is true that very few talk about
writing without talking about reading.  
 
In the 70s noone really knew the connection--or at least talked about it very
little.  Just look at the changes in The Reading Teacher by numbers of stories
sometime.  There was rarely, really rarely, an article about writing there in
the 60s and early 70s.  NCTE also was pretty straight writing, rarely
mentioning reading and not in a substantive way.
 
I know it's trite, but I can't help it:  We've come a long way,
Baby!  When we think of Four Blocks (of which I really know not so much) or any
balanced or comprehensive program today, we would never leave out the writing
component!!  Take a look at something so basic as the name of what we talk
about:  LITERACY!  When I started reading research on emergent literacy in the
early/mid 80s, there was a lot of professional discussion about what to name
it, believe it or not!  So we can probably all say thank you to Bill Teale and
Elizabeth Sulzby every time we talk about balanced literacy, comprehensive
literacy, or any other kind of language arts instruction in the world today,
which inevitably has the word literacy in its title. 
 
In those days, the ONLY writing instruction was at the senior high level,
unless someone in Birkenstocks threw in "creative" writing on Friday
afternoons.
 
And yet...we've only begun to scrape the surface of the reciprocal nature
of reading/writing.  
 
Sunday afternoon thoughts, Bev 
 
 
 
 
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