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The DfEโ€™s Writing Framework: Our review and implications for practice

August 30th, 2025

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Enhancing studentsโ€™ writing: The power of revision checklist sessions

August 28th, 2025

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Why is emotion often the missing piece in our understanding of teaching writing?

August 23rd, 2025

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Whatโ€™s good writing? Well, it depends who you ask

August 23rd, 2025

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Understanding whatโ€™s at โ€˜the heartโ€™ of the writing process

August 22nd, 2025

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Why Johnny canโ€™t and wonโ€™t write

August 17th, 2025

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Six discourses, four philosophies, one framework: A critical reading of the DfEโ€™s writing guidance

August 13th, 2025

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Write to read, read to write: Reimagining the writing classroom

July 29th, 2025

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Composition conceptualised: Why is it important for teachers to have a productive conception of composition?

July 25th, 2025

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Children as Writers: Does choice impact motivation in Year 6 writing? by Alice Bidder

July 24th, 2025

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Debunking edu-myths: Pupils should write about the wider-curriculum subjects in writing lessons

July 23rd, 2025

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How Writing For Pleasure transformed our grammar teaching โ€“ and our SATS results by Justin Gisby-Clark

July 22nd, 2025

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Debunking edu-myths: โ€œIn Reception and Year One, composition is less relevantโ€

July 21st, 2025

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Debunking edu-myths: We must develop childrenโ€™s motor skills first, and teach writing later

July 19th, 2025

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Bringing pleasure to reading lessons through writing

July 18th, 2025

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Debunking edu-myths: โ€œChildren choosing their own writing topics gets in the way of teaching writing effectivelyโ€

July 17th, 2025

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Debunking edu-myths: โ€œThe best way to teach pupils to write is by teaching them to master sentencesโ€

July 17th, 2025

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What do we really mean by โ€œI got my best writingโ€ฆโ€?

July 16th, 2025

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The rise of โ€˜elaborate dictationโ€™ and โ€˜writing-related simulationsโ€™ in English schools: Unethical writing teaching

July 16th, 2025

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Teaching encoding

July 15th, 2025

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Celebrating aspects of the DfEโ€™s Writing Framework: Championing personal writing projects

July 14th, 2025

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Debunking edu-myths: โ€˜Emergent writingโ€™ isnโ€™t necessary before teaching children to write

July 11th, 2025

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Celebrating aspects of the DfEโ€™s Writing Framework: We can finally move on from the book-based approach to writing

July 10th, 2025

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Celebrating aspects of the DfEโ€™s Writing Framework: An evidence-informed step towards meaningful, motivating writing instruction

July 8th, 2025

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Debunking edu-myths: Scope and sequences canโ€™t coexist with responsive writing instruction

July 7th, 2025

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Debunking edu-myths: Children must master sentence-level accuracy before they can write whole texts

July 4th, 2025

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Debunking edu-myths: Writing errors form bad habits

July 2nd, 2025

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Teaching young children to write: The case for ditching extended writing

June 19th, 2025

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Enhancing your writing teaching: Insights from a metacognitive model

June 17th, 2025

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How to keep students motivated to proofread: Practical strategies for the classroom

June 13th, 2025

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The Writing For Pleasure Centreโ€™s Sentence-Level Curriculum

June 9th, 2025

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How to teach writing in the EYFS

June 8th, 2025

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How to teach writing in Key Stage One

June 7th, 2025

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Balancing scripted lessons with teacher autonomy:ย How Writing For Pleasure Centre units work

May 2nd, 2025

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Early writing development and our book-making approach

April 24th, 2025

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The relationship between childrenโ€™s oral language and the quality of their writing

April 4th, 2025

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Transcription and oral language are key to childrenโ€™s early writing development

March 31st, 2025

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Identifying and addressing childrenโ€™s writing needs

March 19th, 2025

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What might a high-stakes national โ€˜writing fluencyโ€™ assessment look like and why is it a bad idea?

March 19th, 2025

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โ€œI canโ€™t writeโ€: An autistic studentโ€™s journey with Writing For Pleasure

March 12th, 2025

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The writing map & evidence-informed writing teaching

March 10th, 2025

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Visualising the science of writing: The writing map explained

February 27th, 2025

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What writing ambitions do schools have for economically underserved pupils?

February 6th, 2025

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Helping children proof-read their spellings

January 31st, 2025

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Developing motivated and successful writers in the EYFS

January 22nd, 2025

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Underwriting: Should teachers do it?

January 16th, 2025

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โ€œThis is when we play writing!โ€: Writing and play in the EYFS

January 14th, 2025

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Supporting at-risk writers in Nursery and Reception

January 8th, 2025

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Supporting children who are at risk of writing failure

January 6th, 2025

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Are students with high creativity skills successful writers?

December 13th, 2024

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The effects of ‘informed spelling’ on children’s reading and writing achievement

December 10th, 2024

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How should teachers use books to inspire and guide EYFS pupils in creating their own non-fiction texts?

November 13th, 2024

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Let’s use ‘kids writing!’

November 10th, 2024

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How can you teach children to write before they know their letters?

November 10th, 2024

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How do children start learning to write before they start school?

November 10th, 2024

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A sensible (centralist) approach to early writing teaching

November 10th, 2024

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What is student agency and why is it needed now more than ever?

November 6th, 2024

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Translating ideas into writing: Highโ€‘impact strategies to nurture childrenโ€ฒs writing in early childhood classrooms

October 28th, 2024

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Student agency in the writing classroom: A systematic review of the literature

October 25th, 2024

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How can non-fiction writing be taught in the EYFS to inspire and develop children’s writerly knowledge and confidence?

October 18th, 2024

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Response to Ofstedโ€™s โ€œStrong foundations in the first years of schoolโ€ report

October 10th, 2024

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Childrenโ€™s agency in the primary school writing classroom

October 7th, 2024

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Aiming for authenticity: successes and struggles in increasing authenticity in the writing classroom

October 2nd, 2024

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Asking writers: What subject knowledge do teachers need to teach writing?

September 23rd, 2024

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It’s OK! Don’t panic! You can give children agency and structure in the writing classroom

September 17th, 2024

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Real-world writing: Making purpose and audience matter

September 11th, 2024

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Understanding why people write: Making writing authentic for children

September 9th, 2024

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The Mercers’ Company & The Open University: Approaches to reading and writing for pleasure

August 30th, 2024

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Friends and authors: The benefits of children co-authoring

August 26th, 2024

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Comparing childrenโ€™s oral and written storyretelling: the role of ideation and transcription

August 22nd, 2024

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Reigniting young writers: Supporting authentic class writing projects

August 17th, 2024

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Authenticity and childrenโ€™s engagement with writing

August 17th, 2024

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Does โ€˜perspective takingโ€™ matter for students’ writing?

August 17th, 2024

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‘This isnโ€™t my real writing’: The fate of childrenโ€™s agency in narrow writing schemes

August 7th, 2024

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Bringing purpose & audience to the centre of our writing classrooms

August 5th, 2024

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Learning to read as writers: The role of authentic class writing projects

August 2nd, 2024

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The principles of planning effective class writing projects

July 31st, 2024

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Keeping it real: Valuing authenticity in the writing classroom

July 26th, 2024

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Who is going to read the story that I have written? The role of audience when planning, drafting and revising

July 26th, 2024

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How we can support children as they are writing

July 24th, 2024

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Writing strategies for English language learners

July 22nd, 2024

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Thinking through writing: writing to learn

July 19th, 2024

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The effects of writing-to-learn on academic achievement

July 19th, 2024

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Drawing first, writing after: A winning strategy for early writers

July 19th, 2024

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Intertextuality. The glue that binds reading for pleasure and writing for pleasure together?

July 18th, 2024

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The book-planning 2.0 approach

July 18th, 2024

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Reading for pleasureโ€™s impact on writing for pleasure

July 18th, 2024

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How to help children plan their writing

July 18th, 2024

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How to teach your pupils to read as writers

July 18th, 2024

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How to co-construct success criteria with your pupils for class writing projects

July 17th, 2024

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What are children doing as they produce writing?

July 17th, 2024

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The contribution of working memory on young writers

July 13th, 2024

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How can we encourage children to think about their readers as they are writing?

July 13th, 2024

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Dialogic writing. How to support peer feedback conversations

July 13th, 2024

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The rationale for revision checklist sessions

July 13th, 2024

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Comparing young childrenโ€™s oral and written storyretelling: the role of ideation and transcription

July 12th, 2024

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Evidence-based recommendations for teaching writing

July 8th, 2024

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Poems, not a poem: Reimagining poetry projects

July 5th, 2024

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The ABCs of childrenโ€™s writing motivation

June 29th, 2024

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The writer(s)- within- community model and improving the teaching of writing across a school

May 27th, 2024

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Fostering writer identity & belonging in the classroom

May 27th, 2024

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The double helix theory for teaching writing and reading

May 21st, 2024

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Obtain quality writing by giving children some agency

May 20th, 2024

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Mobilising childrenโ€™s motives for writing

May 14th, 2024

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Supporting children with written expression disabilities

May 14th, 2024

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A systematic review and metaโ€analysis of the effectiveness of spelling instruction and intervention

May 10th, 2024

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The relationship between writing fluency & writing quality in 5-8 year olds

May 4th, 2024

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What is writing fluency?

May 4th, 2024

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No more: They don’t know what a sentence is!

May 2nd, 2024

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Building up to extended writing projects

May 2nd, 2024

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Spelling and handwriting provision: A checklist

May 2nd, 2024

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The research on developing childrenโ€™s transcription and compositional skills

May 2nd, 2024

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Multicomponent writing instruction appears to yield better results

April 26th, 2024

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The relationship between reading and writing on children’s compositions

April 26th, 2024

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The relationship between oral language, content knowledge, cognitive skills and writing

April 26th, 2024

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The impact of oral language and transcription skills on children’s early writing

April 25th, 2024

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Teach transcription and composition alone or together?

April 22nd, 2024

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Expanding the developmental models of writing: A direct and indirect effects model of developmental writing

April 22nd, 2024

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Yes, they can: Developing transcription and compositional skills together to help children write informative essays at grades 1 and 2

April 22nd, 2024

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How we can make writing feel less effortful for children

April 22nd, 2024

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Evidence-based practices which give children writing confidence

April 15th, 2024

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The different perspectives you can take on teaching early writing

March 15th, 2024

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Response to Ofstedโ€™s โ€œTelling the story: The English education subject report”

March 8th, 2024

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Writing non-fiction with heart and voice

November 20th, 2023

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Planning a class writing project with the greater-depth standard as the standard

October 30th, 2023

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Evidence-based writing instruction for 11-18 year olds

October 27th, 2023

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Which writing model would best guide us to raise writing standards in our school?

October 20th, 2023

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Sentence-level instruction: Our viewpoint

September 29th, 2023

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Using focus groups to teach writing

September 20th, 2023

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Guidance on what NOT to do when teaching at the sentence-level

September 18th, 2023

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Whereโ€™s the research on teaching at the sentence-level?

September 15th, 2023

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Guidance on teaching at the sentence-level

September 13th, 2023

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We Are Authors Too! Book-making for World Book Day

July 4th, 2023

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What is a high-quality text in the context of the writing classroom?

June 21st, 2023

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How to get success criteria right in the writing classroom

May 19th, 2023

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Childrenโ€™s reflections on โ€˜business as usualโ€™ writing units and Writing For Pleasure class writing projects

May 17th, 2023

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When writing success criteria goes wrong

May 12th, 2023

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The components of effective grammar instruction

May 8th, 2023

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What does effective โ€˜shared writingโ€™ look like?

May 5th, 2023

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How can we improve childrenโ€™s motivation to write?

May 3rd, 2023

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A list of great texts which teach great writing: Mentor texts for 3-103 year olds

May 1st, 2023

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Reading different types of fiction in the writing classroom

April 28th, 2023

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The Writing For Pleasure Centreโ€™s progression for poetry writing: EYFS-KS2

April 26th, 2023

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The Writing For Pleasure Centreโ€™s progression for nonfiction writing: EYFS-KS2

April 24th, 2023

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The Writing For Pleasure Centreโ€™s progression for narrative writing: EYFS-KS2

April 21st, 2023

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Articles & resources to help you develop a cohesive approach and progression for writing in your school

April 19th, 2023

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Writing: Articles and resources to help you with your schoolโ€™s action plan

April 17th, 2023

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What the KS1 STA teacher assessment writing statements really mean and how to achieve them

April 14th, 2023

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What the KS2 STA teacher assessment writing statements really mean and how to achieve them

April 13th, 2023

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14 ways to improve the writing teaching in your school

April 11th, 2023

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How we can improve the confidence of struggling writers

April 11th, 2023

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Reading different types of nonfiction in the writing classroom

April 8th, 2023

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What does the research say about reading in writing lessons?

April 6th, 2023

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Why ‘Writing For Pleasure’ teachers are always teaching

April 5th, 2023

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Trust the process: setting process goals

April 3rd, 2023

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Establishing publishing goals for class writing projects

April 2nd, 2023

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How do we develop writing fluency?

March 30th, 2023

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Being a reader-writer-teacher

March 28th, 2023

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A quick guide to class sharing and Authorโ€™s Chair

March 25th, 2023

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The components of an effective writing unit

March 22nd, 2023

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Teaching children how to plan their writing in KS2

March 17th, 2023

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The Science of Special Education Podcast: Providing research-based writing instruction

March 11th, 2023

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Teaching children how to plan their writing in the EYFS and KS1

March 9th, 2023

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Youโ€™re their writer-teacher! Supporting children to find fruitful writing ideas

March 7th, 2023

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How to help children plan great writing

March 1st, 2023

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Suggested writing practices for children with behavioural or emotional disorders

February 28th, 2023

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Research-based writing practices specific to the EYFS

February 20th, 2023

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Getting writing instruction right for children with SEND

February 17th, 2023

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Writing For Pleasure and the role childrenโ€™s emotions play in exceptional writing classrooms

February 16th, 2023

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The cognitive and motivational case for inviting children to generate their own writing ideas

January 21st, 2023

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Evidence-based writing instruction for children with SEND

January 14th, 2023

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The components of effective sentence-level instruction

December 29th, 2022

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Why diversity in writing matters! Exploring the Writing Realities framework

November 16th, 2022

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Children proof-reading and cognitive overload

November 5th, 2022

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Imaginative writing: Our viewpoint

October 21st, 2022

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The secret to children doing great proof-reading

October 20th, 2022

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More top tips when talking to children about editing

October 12th, 2022

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Top tips when talking to children about editing

October 4th, 2022

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Eight tips for developing great proof-readers

September 26th, 2022

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What is a Writing For Pleasure pedagogy?

September 15th, 2022

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The components of an effective writing lesson

July 22nd, 2022

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A whole generation of children have been put on โ€˜writersโ€™ welfareโ€™

July 19th, 2022

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The direct and indirect effects model of writing

July 15th, 2022

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How can we ensure children are writing independently every day?

July 13th, 2022

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The not so simple view of writing

July 11th, 2022

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What to do when you think you donโ€™t have time to write

June 4th, 2022

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Response to Ofstedโ€™s research and analysis. Curriculum research review series: English

May 27th, 2022

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Getting Writing Instruction Right

April 29th, 2022

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The Importance Of A Whole-School Vision For Writing

March 31st, 2022

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What Sort Of Writing Teacher Are You?

March 24th, 2022

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Writing Persuasive Letters For Personal Gain In Year 4

March 22nd, 2022

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Spinning A Web Of Great Story Ideas

March 11th, 2022

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Having an Ideas Party & taking a Writing Register with Year Four

February 10th, 2022

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I want to discuss this! Children writing their own discussion texts

February 3rd, 2022

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Mr Creighton, can we send our stories to some experts for feedback?

February 1st, 2022

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We’re Going On A Writing Lesson Hunt!

January 13th, 2022

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The Education Endowment Foundationโ€™s Improving Literacy In KS2 Guidance Report: Our Review And Implications For Teaching Writing

December 15th, 2021

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“What do I do with all these ideas?”

December 13th, 2021

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It’s time to make a change!

December 3rd, 2021

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The power of children requesting their own writing lessons

November 30th, 2021

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Look what happened to my speedy book!

November 25th, 2021

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Improving on a first draft: intriguing introductions

November 17th, 2021

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Speedy books: making planning authentic

November 12th, 2021

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Generating ideas for information texts: thinking โ€˜Factionโ€™

November 11th, 2021

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Calling at the Writing Station

November 9th, 2021

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The benefits of building a class library of childrenโ€™s own writing

November 8th, 2021

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What does a knowledge-based writing curriculum involve?

October 5th, 2021

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Developing Children’s Talk For Writing

September 13th, 2021

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How Important Is Talk For Writing?

August 23rd, 2021

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The DfEโ€™s Reading Framework: Our Review And Implications For Teaching Writing

July 13th, 2021

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Reluctant Writers: Where Do We Start? By Ellen Counter

July 7th, 2021

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Teachersโ€™ Talk Radio Interview with Ross Young & Tobias Hayden

May 31st, 2021

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*New minibook* Pupil-conferencing with 3-11 year olds: Powerful feedback & responsive teaching that changes writers

May 27th, 2021

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Are you for real? Bringing purpose and authenticity into the writing classroom for Teach Reading & Writing magazine

May 24th, 2021

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NATE: What can we learn from Writing for Pleasure teachers? for Primary Matters magazine

May 5th, 2021

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The research on handwriting

April 20th, 2021

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The rights (and responsibilities) of the child writer

April 19th, 2021

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Writing with the family โ€“ sofa scribbling, duvet drafting & dinner-time dabbling! by Tobias Hayden

April 15th, 2021

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*NEW* UKLA’s Teachers’ Writing Group

April 16th, 2021

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The Writing For Pleasure Centreโ€™s โ€˜We Can Make Books Tooโ€™ Project

April 15th, 2021

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Writing is one of the best ways to teach readingโ€ฆ

April 14th, 2021

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NAAE Writing For Pleasure event on the 24th of April.

April 1st, 2021

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The Writing For Pleasure Centre’s Children As Writers survey

March 11th, 2021

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Our second teachersโ€™ writing group by Sam Creighton

March 11th, 2021

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Developing a sincere writing curriculum in KS1

February 20th, 2021

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Teaching grammar: our viewpoint

February 9th, 2021

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Our first teachersโ€™ writing group by Sam Creighton

February 9th, 2021

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Focus on writing for pleasure in primary schools National Education Union

February 3rd, 2021

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โ€œAnyone wanna collab?โ€ Personal writing projects go online!

January 26th, 2021

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Reflections on the Writing For Pleasure approach during Lockdown by Benjamin Harris

January 26th, 2021

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Writing with some pupils in my Year One class

January 25th, 2021

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A love letter to genre teaching

January 18th, 2021

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That’s the way I work: One child’s experience of a Writing For Pleasure pedagogy

December 23rd, 2020

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Closing out the year by giving the children a writerโ€™s notebook

December 9th, 2020

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Writing and using a mentor text: Example of practice

December 8th, 2020

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Teachersโ€™ Institute with The UKLA โ€“ Sunday 31st January

December 6th, 2020

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Issues with the book planning approach and how they can be addressed

November 29th, 2020

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Why effective writing instruction requires a writer-teacher

November 10th, 2020

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They wonโ€™t have anything to write about: The dangers of believing children are โ€˜culturally deprivedโ€™

November 4th, 2020

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What makes children want to write

October 22nd, 2020

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What the research says: the most effective ways to improve children’s writing

October 21st, 2020

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A guide to reading with children

October 12th, 2020

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How writing approaches built on using stimuli are damaging children’s writing development

October 3rd, 2020

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Join our virtual poetry retreat (this time, for adults) this half-term

September 20th, 2020

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The DfE and Writing For Pleasure: What happened and what should happen next?

September 10th, 2020

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Writing tests are not the answer you are looking for

August 17th, 2020

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What if almost everything we thought about the teaching of writing was wrong?

July 15th, 2020

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Supporting children writing at home

May 22nd, 2020

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The most common misconceptions about ‘Writing For Pleasure’ debunked

May 18th, 2020

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*NEW BOOK* Engaging Writing Teaching

In Engaging Writing Teaching, writer-teachers Ross Young and Felicity Ferguson explore what it means for children to be truly engaged as writers.

From the authors of The Science of Teaching Primary Writing and Writing for Pleasure, this new title offers an actionable framework for developing writing engagement in schools based on five key drivers:

  • Behavioural engagement: Will I participate actively? Will I put in effort, stay focused, and persist when things get difficult?
  • Affective engagement: How do I feel about writing? Am I curious, interested, and emotionally invested enough in what Iโ€™m writing?
  • Cognitive engagement: How much will I think about this? Am I willing to generate great ideas, plan carefully, reflect critically and make thoughtful revisions and edits?
  • Social engagement: How am I connecting with others through this writing? Am I collaborating, sharing ideas and responding to feedback as part of a community of writers?
  • Academic engagement: How committed am I to mastering the skills outlined in the curriculum? Am I applying effort, strategy, and persistence to improve my academic competence?

This inspiring and practical book will help you create a writing classroom where every child feels connected, capable, and compelled to write, not because they have to but because they want to.

Individual license – ยฃ10.95

School/Institution license – ยฃ54.75

or FREE for members

We Know Transcription Is Important But Have We Forgotten Why?

The goal of this article is to reorientate our understanding of why transcription matters: shifting it away from compliance and correction, and towards a reader-centred, meaning-making approach in which transcription supports effective communication. It also seeks to hold transcription and composition together, rather than privileging one over the other, and to validate emergent writing as a legitimate starting point.

Teachers care aboutย transcription. Walk into any primary classroom and you will find children receiving explicit handwriting and spelling lessons. Youโ€™ll see them being reminded to form their letters correctly, to check their spellings and to use capital letters at the start of sentences. Transcription is taught. It is practised. It is marked.

What we may have forgotten though is why it matters.

The DfEโ€™s Writing Framework (2025) puts the problem plainly: 

โ€œToo often, pupils learn to write for the circular purpose of learning to write.โ€

Round and round we go and somewhere along the line we forget the point of it all. We teach about transcription because itโ€™s on the curriculum. We make it a priority because we know Ofsted will like it. We lose sight of the only reason it actually matters: so that the readers of our childrenโ€™s texts can understand them and enjoy them.

โ€œLet us be clear. If children do not learn and internalise the essential transcriptional skills involved in crafting writing (spelling, handwriting, and punctuation), then their attempts to share meaning with others may be compromised or even fruitless.โ€

โ€” Ross Young & Felicity Ferguson

This shift in orientation, from transcription as compliance to transcription as communication, changes everything about how we teach it.

The Real Purpose Of Getting It Right

In our Writing Development Map (2025a), we define writing as being the construction of a text to share meaning. That word, share, is doing important work. Writing is an attempt to move and share something from one person to another. Transcription is the mechanism that makes that transfer possible.

Young writers have extraordinary things to say. The tragedy is that when transcription breaks down, those things become inaccessible. It breaks your heart. A reader who has to wrestle with a text (trying desperately to decode wild spelling attempts or else left squinting at the handwriting) loses the thread and is slowly disconnected from the writer and their meaning. That must be depressing. Their voice gets lost in the chaos.

This is the perspective we should be taking when we teach transcription. 

Not โ€œyour letters need to sit on the lineโ€ as the rule handed down from on high, but โ€œI really want your readers to be able to enjoy the bit about the dragon!โ€ 

Not โ€œyouโ€™ve forgotten your full stopsโ€ simply as a correction, but โ€œI want your readers to know when they can stop and talk about your amazing writing before they eagerly read your next thought.โ€

Not: “Check all the spellings Iโ€™ve underlined.” But: “Let’s make sure these words are spelt conventionally so your reader knows exactly what you mean.โ€

You see the difference? 

We donโ€™t need more attention on transcription. We need better-directed attention (Young & Ferguson 2025a, 2025b, 2026a, 2026b). We know children should:

  • Receive explicit handwriting and spelling lessons.
  • Engage in plenty of meaningful writing experiences so that they can use and apply what they learn.ย 
  • Receive feedback on their handwriting and spelling attempts.

Childrenโ€™s transcriptional development should always be in the service of helping them make and share meaning. Itโ€™s always in the name of the reader.

The Motivational Case For Teaching Transcription Well

This is where motivation becomes not a parallel concern but a directly relevant one. Young & Ferguson (2024) note that the word motive derives from Latin meaning to move. As teachers, we need to help children see the value and purpose of writing so that they are genuinely moved to do it (and to do it to the very best of their abilities). When children understand that transcription serves their readership, effort in transcription becomes purposeful rather than merely about obedience. They are not spelling carefully out of fear of punishment or the dreaded red pen. They are spelling carefully because they want their writing (that they really care about) to stand up and be fully understood.

Research on writing motivation in primary-age children makes clear that early experiences with writing can predispose children to seek it out or avoid it altogether (Young & Ferguson 2024). A systematic review of studentsโ€™ writing motivation found that authentic writing projects and a loving and supportive classroom environment are among the most powerful conditions for developing lasting motivation to write (Alves Wold et al., 2024). Feedback that connects transcriptional effort to a communicative outcome, such as โ€œBecause your spellings were so easy to understand; I could concentrate on performing it to everyone in a really entertaining way. I think they really loved it. Donโ€™t you think so?โ€ is precisely that kind of motivational condition. It feels different because children see it as true.

The Cognitive Case For Teaching Transcription Well

The research on why transcription matters is unambiguous. Handwriting and spelling are foundational ingredients of early writing development, not peripheral concerns (Young & Ferguson, 2023). When transcription is effortful (when a child must consciously attend to how to form every letter or how to spell every word), it crowds out cognitive resources that could be much better spent generating great ideas, selecting precise language and organising their thoughts (Young & Ferguson, 2023).

However, none of this means children are not already writers before their transcription is fully secure. Emergent writing (marks, letter-like shapes and informed spellings) are the developmental foundation for later conventional transcription (Young & Ferguson, 2025c). Emergent writing acts as a temporary scaffold, until children get their transcription skills fully up and running. Children who are allowed to use their emergent writing are already writers (Ray & Glover, 2008; Young & Ferguson, 2022). And as their transcription becomes ever more fluent and automatic, their emergent writing disappears.

โ€œChildren want to write. They want to write the first day they attend school. The childโ€™s marks say, โ€˜I amโ€™.

โ€˜No you arenโ€™t,โ€™ say most school approaches to the teaching of writing.

We take control away from children and place unnecessary road blocks in the way. Then we say, โ€˜They donโ€™t want to write. How can we motivate them?โ€™โ€

โ€” Donald Graves

The use of emergent writing and especially โ€˜kid writingโ€™ is the ultimate leveler. It removes the โ€˜road blocksโ€™ that Donald Graves is talking about. This way, everyone can be a writer from their very first day in Nursery (Young & Ferguson, 2022).

Holding Both Things At Once

The DfEโ€™s Writing Framework (2025) offers a statement that deserves to be on every staffroom wall: 

โ€œTranscription is not writing.โ€

Our Writing Development Map makes the same point. We must care deeply about transcription but we must never mistake it for the whole thing.

Figure 1. The Writing Map (Young & Ferguson, 2025a).ย  Simplified version reproduced for commentary purposes. Full version available [HERE].

Kim et al. (2021) conducted a meta-analysis of 24 studies and found that instruction focused solely on transcription skills (spelling and handwriting) did not yield statistically significant effects on childrenโ€™s writing quality or productivity. By contrast, multi-component instructional approaches, which teach transcription alongside composition strategies, produced large and consistent improvements across all measured dimensions, including quality, productivity, and text structure. Harris et al. (2023) tested this experimentally with pupils from economically underserved areas. Integrated instruction outperformed a business-as-usual approach across major measures, including writing quality, planning, and spelling. The researchers concluded that young children can (and should) learn about transcription and composition simultaneously. Transcription, taught well, and in the right spirit, lifts everything.

Children arrive at school already knowing their marks mean something. Children are incredibly motivated to learn more about transcription because they want to be heard and understood. Our job is to make that happen.

Every time we sit down to teach transcription, letโ€™s ask: whose needs are we focusing on right now? The answer should always be the same. Theirs, and the lucky people who get to read what they have to share.

References

  • Alves-Wold, A., Walgermo, B. R., McTigue, E., & Uppstad, P. H. (2024). The ABCs of writing motivation: A systematic review of factors emerging from Kโ€“5 studentsโ€™ self-reports as influencing their motivation to write. In Frontiers in Education (Vol. 9, p. 1396484). Frontiers Media SA.
  • Department for Education. (2025). The writing framework.
  • Graves, D. H. (1983). Writing: Teachers and children at work. Heinemann.
  • Harris, K.R., Kim, Y-S.G., Yim, S., Camping, A. & Graham, S. (2023). Yes, they can: Developing transcription and compositional skills together to help children write informative essays at grades 1 and 2. Contemporary Educational Psychology, 72, 102131.
  • Kim, Y-S.G., Yang, D., Reyes, M. & Connor, C. (2021). Multicomponent writing instruction appears to yield better results. Educational Research Review, 34, 100401.
  • Ray, K. W., & Glover, M. (2008). Already ready. NH: Heinemann.
  • Young, R., & Ferguson, F. (2022). Getting children up and running as writers: Lessons for EYFS-KS1 teachers. The Writing for Pleasure Centre.
  • Young, R., & Ferguson, F. (2023). The science of teaching primary writing. The Writing for Pleasure Centre.
  • Young, R., & Ferguson, F. (2024). Motivating writing teaching. The Writing for Pleasure Centre.
  • Young, R., & Ferguson, F. (2025a). Visualising the science of writing: The writing map explained. The Writing for Pleasure Centre.
  • Young, R., & Ferguson, F. (2025b). Underwriting: Should teachers do it? The Writing for Pleasure Centre.
  • Young, R., & Ferguson, F. (2025c). Debunking edu-myths: โ€˜Emergent writingโ€™ isnโ€™t necessary before teaching children to writeThe Writing for Pleasure Centre.
  • Young, R., & Ferguson, F. (2026a). Spelling and handwriting provision: A checklist. The Writing for Pleasure Centre.
  • Young, R., & Ferguson, F. (2026b). Debunking edu-myths: Children should only write words they can spell. The Writing for Pleasure Centre.

Writing Off Childrenโ€™s Potential: Why Englandโ€™s Writing Early Learning Goal Must Be Reformed

A policy briefing on the Writing Early Learning Goal โ€” March 2026

Ross Young & Felicity Ferguson – The Writing For Pleasure Centre

Executive Summary: The Writing Early Learning Goal (DfE, 2024) erroneously focuses solely on the mechanics of transcription (letter formation and phonetic spelling). It does not assess composition, oral language, executive function or purpose and audience. It is therefore not a measure of early writing.

The evidence is unambiguous. A meta-analysis (Kim et al., 2021) found that instruction focused solely on transcription has no significant effect on childrenโ€™s writing quality. The ELG does not just fail to capture what writing is, it channels schools towards approaches that demonstrably fail to develop it.

The DfEโ€™s own Writing Framework (2025) states explicitly: โ€˜transcription is not writingโ€™. The ELG assesses children solely on transcription. The DfE defines writing one way and is now measuring it in another. This is a structural contradiction that will have dire consequences.

Children who meet the ELG without ever being required to compose something independently will arrive at Key Stage 1 grossly underprepared for its demands. National data will also overstate childrenโ€™s writing capabilities.

This briefing calls for the immediate commissioning of an evidence-led review to realign the ELG with the DfEโ€™s own stated model of writing development.

1. What The ELG Measures And What It Misses

The Writing ELG is assessed against three criteria: 

  • writing recognisable letters, most of which are correctly formed.
  • spelling words by identifying sounds in them.
  • writing simple phrases and sentences that can be read by others.

Each criterion concerns the mechanics of putting marks on a page. None of them asks whether the child has anything to say. None asks whether they have a reason to write, a sense of a reader, a capacity to plan or revise, or a growing identity as a writer. Recent accompanying guidance makes this explicit: children โ€˜do not need to compose independentlyโ€™ to meet the ELG, and dictated sentences (in which the teacher speaks and the child transcribes) are described as valid assessment tools (DfE, 2026).

The international research on writing development is often organised around a clear model The Simple View of Writing which identifies three components that must all develop, and must be developed together, for a child to become a writer (Berninger & Winn, 2006; Young & Ferguson, 2025). However, the ELG only addresses one of these three:

ComponentWhat it requiresWhat the ELG does with it
TranscriptionHandwriting, spelling, letter formationThe ELGโ€™s sole focus
Executive FunctionPlanning, monitoring, revision, self-regulation, motivationEntirely absent
CompositionGenerating ideas, communicating with intent, writing for a readerEntirely absent

The ELG, as it is currently presented, is not a measure of writing. The ELG can be met by a child who isnโ€™t required to compose a sentence of their own. This is surely one of the lowest educational expectations you can have of a child. That child is not a writer in any sense of the word.

The DfEโ€™s own Writing Framework (2025) recognises this, stating directly: โ€˜transcription is not writingโ€™. The ELG ignores its own departmentโ€™s definition.

2. The Evidence: Transcription Alone Does Not Produce Writing

The ELGโ€™s implicit model is sequential: master transcription first and learn to compose later. Children essentially have to โ€˜earn their right to writeโ€™ (Young & Ferguson, 2024). However, this sense of ordering is not supported by research evidence. Indeed, it is contradicted by it.

Transcription-only instruction does not improve writing quality

Kim et al. (2021) conducted a meta-analysis of 24 studies and found that instruction focused solely on transcription skills (spelling and handwriting) did not yield statistically significant effects on childrenโ€™s writing quality or productivity. By contrast, multi-component instructional approaches, which teach transcription alongside composition strategies, produced large and consistent improvements across all measured dimensions, including quality, productivity, and text structure. Harris et al. (2023) tested this experimentally with pupils from economically underserved areas. Integrated instruction outperformed a business-as-usual approach across major measures, including writing quality, planning, and spelling. The researchers concluded that concerns about cognitive overload were not supported by their data, suggesting that young children can (and should) learn about transcription and composition simultaneously. 

The policy implication is direct. An assessment framework that promotes transcription-only teaching is directing teachers towards an approach the evidence shows does not develop childrenโ€™s writing.

Oral language is critical but entirely absent from the Writing ELG

Oral language is among the most consistent predictors of early writing quality with effects that grow stronger as children develop (Seoane et al., 2025). Rodrรญguez et al. (2024) found that oral compositional skills contribute to writing quality independently of transcription ability. McIntyre et al. (2025) found that childrenโ€™s oral story telling directly predicted their written story quality.

Kim & Schatschneiderโ€™s expanded model of writing development (2017) shows that oral language serves as the bridge through which higher-order cognitive skills (inference, perspective-taking, content knowledge) reach the written page. A child who has not been given opportunities to compose lacks a critical foundation for later writing success (Young & Ferguson 2025).

The Writing ELG contains no reference to oral language. Indeed, children are not required to speak to meet the goal. Instead, they can have writing dictated to them by their teacher. An assessment that ignores one of writingโ€™s most powerful predictors is not measuring writing well, even on its own terms.

3. The DfE Is Contradicting Itself

The strongest argument for reform does not come from external research. It comes from the DfE itself. The Writing Framework, published in July 2025, adopts the Simple View of Writing

The Simple View Of Writing As Illustrated In The DfEโ€™ Writing Framework (p.17)

It emphasises the importance of composition and purpose and audience. It also warns explicitly that โ€˜too often, pupils learn to write for the circular purpose of learning to write.โ€™ It also states: โ€˜transcription is not writingโ€™. However, the DfEโ€™s own writing model is now abandoned. 

The ELG reproduces only the three transcription criteria. Composition is stated not to be required. Dictated transcription is validated as evidence. This is a structural failure: the DfE is defining writing one way and measuring it in another.

4. What The ELG Produces In Classrooms

Assessment shapes teachersโ€™ practice. When the statutory measure for writing only rewards transcription, schools will concentrate on what is rewarded. However, Gerde et al. (2022) report that children in preschool classrooms where teachers support composition and meaning-making alongside transcription demonstrate more advanced writing by the end of the year than peers in classrooms where the focus was restricted to transcription skills alone. 

A Reception year shaped by the current ELG produces a predictable profile: children who can form letters and encode phonetically but who have never been asked to generate an idea, write for a reader, plan what they want to say, or experience writing as a joyful and communicative act of meaning-making and meaning-sharing. We run the very real risk of developing the most reluctant, listless and unmotivated writers for a generation.

5. The Important Stuff The ELG Doesnโ€™t See

The ELGโ€™s product-focused, transcription-only framework makes two categories of developmentally significant writing behaviour entirely invisible.

Emergent writing behaviours

Children begin demonstrating compositional behaviour long before they can encode conventionally. Rowe (2018) found that children as young as three can successfully select topics, generate ideas, organise content and revise their writing. Rohloff et al. (2025) found that preschoolers frequently revise mid-composition, adjusting their plans and vocabulary as their thinking develops. These are executive function behaviours: self-regulation, monitoring, revision. They are present in children entering Reception. However, the ELG doesnโ€™t recognise this as important to assess.

Spelling development through informed attempts

The ELGโ€™s phonetic spelling criterion encourages teachers to simply get children to write words they already know their children will be able to spell conventionally. This simply flatters to deceive (Young & Ferguson, 2026). It tells us very little. Research also shows that these kinds of restrictions are counterproductive. Children who are encouraged to attempt words they really want to write (using informed spellings) make greater gains in phonological awareness, orthographic knowledge, reading and conventional spelling than those who are restricted to writing already known words (Ouellette & Sรฉnรฉchal, 2008). Attempting to spell a word requires active engagement with phoneme-grapheme relationships; reproducing already known words does not. Young & Ferguson (2026) also note that childrenโ€™s informed spellings are the most valuable diagnostic information for teachers, revealing precisely what each child understands about the alphabetic code.

An ELG that encourages a โ€˜write only what you can already spellโ€™ culture does not support spelling development. It impedes it while simultaneously constraining vocabulary development, thwarting childrenโ€™s compositional ambitions and removing the diagnostic information that good writing teaching depends on (Young & Ferguson, 2026).

6. System Consequences

The ELGโ€™s shortcomings do not affect only the Reception year. They will invariably generate system-level consequences.

National data distortion

A child who can transcribe a dictated sentence with correctly formed letters can now meet the ELG. That same child may be unable to independently compose a sentence, sustain a piece of writing, or write for any purpose beyond regurgitation. The data derived from ELG judgements will therefore overstate the proportion of children who are genuinely able to write. While there is no doubt that the lowering of expectations will increase the number of children who technically achieve the ELG for writing, national performance data will be misleading.

The Key Stage 1 transition gap

In KS1, children are required to independently plan, draft, revise and proof-read their compositions. These demands draw on composition, executive function and oral language – the two thirds of the Simple View of Writing the ELG does not assess. Children trained only in transcription will face a sharp increase in cognitive demand at this transition without the foundational development that will equip them to meet it. School leaders and Key Stage One teachers should be concerned.

Assessment integrity

The exemplification video accompanying the ELG carries the following disclaimer: โ€˜While it features real children in real school settings, their actual developmental levels may differ from what is shown, and some scenes include acting for demonstration purposes.โ€™ Exemplification materials that use acted footage cannot calibrate professional judgement. This is not acceptable.

7. Required Reforms

The core problem is straightforward: The ELG defines writing as a skill it is not. The solution requires no new conceptual framework as the DfEโ€™s own Writing Framework already provides one. What is required is alignment between what the Department says writing is and what itโ€™s choosing to measure.

The research base points clearly to what better provision looks like. Young and Ferguson (2021, 2022, 2024, 2025) describe it as the โ€˜communicative orientationโ€™: an approach in which transcription and composition are developed together, in which children write daily for genuine purposes and real audiences, in which oral language is treated as a foundation rather than a supplement, and in which the classroom functions as a community of writers in which children see themselves as people who have things to say and the means to say them. Research consistently shows that children in classrooms that take this integrated, communicative approach develop stronger writing skills than those in classrooms dominated by transcription-only drills (Bingham et al., 2017; Young & Ferguson, 2024). This is the model a revised ELG should support.

We call on policymakers to commission an immediate, evidence-led review of the Writing ELG with the following objectives:

1. Adopt the Simple View of Writing as the organising framework.  A revised ELG should require evidence across all three components: transcription, executive function and composition. This is the model the DfE’s Writing Framework already endorses. The ELG and the Framework must say the same thing.

2. Require independent composition.  Children must demonstrate that they can generate and communicate their own ideas in writing. The guidance stating that composition is not required must be removed. Research demonstrates that teaching transcription and composition together produces better outcomes than teaching transcription alone at every age group studied.

3. Recognise oral language. Oral language is a direct, independent predictor of writing quality. A revised ELG should include criteria that acknowledge oral compositional capacity as a component of the writing picture.

4. Recognise the writing process. Planning, drafting and revision are integral to writing development from the earliest stages. Preschool-age children demonstrate these behaviours when writing is taught well. Criteria should be added that values engagement with the writing processes and not only with the written product.

5. Include purpose and audience. Writing that communicates to a real reader for a genuine purpose develops more advanced writers than writing produced as a transcriptional exercise. Classrooms where children write for genuine purposes can go on to produce better outcomes. An ELG that ignores purpose removes the incentive to create such classrooms.

6. Revise the approach to spelling. Children who attempt to spell words they really want to write (using informed spellings) make greater gains in phonological awareness, orthographic knowledge and conventional spelling than do those children who are restricted to words they already know. A revised framework should value children’s ambitious encoding attempts and not penalise them.

7. Remove dictation as assessment evidence. Dictation measures whether a child can transcribe someone else’s sentence. It cannot measure composition, vocabulary choice, sentence construction or authorial intent. It should be retained as a teaching tool but removed as an assessment instrument.

8. Replace the exemplification materials. Authentic exemplification showing children composing independently in real classroom contexts must replace the current acted footage.

Every year that this issue persists, hundreds of thousands of children will complete the Reception year assessed as writers on a measure that does not assess writing. At present, teachers are being directed towards a version of writing that the DfEโ€™s own guidance tells them is insufficient. We suspect it will be children from disadvantaged backgrounds who will pay the highest price.

References and further reading

  • Berninger, V.W. & Winn, W.D. (2006). Implications of advancements in brain research for writing development. In C.A. MacArthur, S. Graham & J. Fitzgerald (Eds.), Handbook of Writing Research (pp. 96โ€“114). Guilford Press.
  • Bingham, G. E., Quinn, M. F., & Gerde, H. K. (2017). Examining early childhood teachersโ€™ writing practices: Associations between pedagogical supports and childrenโ€™s writing skills. Early childhood research quarterly, 39, 35-46.
  • Department for Education (2024). Early Years Foundation Stage Statutory Framework.
  • Department for Education (2025). The Writing Framework. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/68bec95444fd43581bda1c86/The_writing_framework_092025.pdf
  • Department for Education (2026). EYFS profile assessment support: ELG Writing https://help-for-early-years-providers.education.gov.uk/support-for-practitioners/eyfs-profile-assessment-support/writing-early-learning-goal
  • Gerde, H. K., Wright, T. S., & Bingham, G. E. (2022). Sharing their ideas with the world: Creating meaningful writing experiences for young children. American educator, 45(4), 34.
  • Harris, K.R., Kim, Y-S.G., Yim, S., Camping, A. & Graham, S. (2023). Yes, they can: Developing transcription and compositional skills together to help children write informative essays at grades 1 and 2. Contemporary Educational Psychology, 72, 102131.
  • Kim, Y-S.G. & Schatschneider, C. (2017). Expanding the developmental models of writing: A direct and indirect effects model of developmental writing. Journal of Educational Psychology, 109(1), 35โ€“50.
  • Kim, Y-S.G., Yang, D., Reyes, M. & Connor, C. (2021). Multicomponent writing instruction appears to yield better results. Educational Research Review, 34, 100401.
  • McIntyre, A., Scott, A., McNeill, B., & Gillon, G. (2025). Comparing young childrenโ€™s oral and written story retelling: the role of ideation and transcription. Speech, Language and Hearing, 28(1), 2357450.
  • Ouellette, G. P., & Sรฉnรฉchal, M. (2008). A window into early literacy: Exploring the cognitive and linguistic underpinnings of invented spelling. Scientific Studies of Reading, 12(2), 195-219.
  • Rodrรญguez, C., Jimรฉnez, J. E., & Balade, J. (2025). The impact of oral language and transcription skills on early writing production in kindergarteners: Productivity and quality. Early Childhood Education Journal, 53(4), 1-11.
  • Rohloff, R., Ridley, J., Quinn, M. F., & Zhang, X. (2025). Young Childrenโ€™s Composing Processes: Idea Transformations in Verbalizations from Pre-Writing to Post-Writing. Early Childhood Education Journal, 53(6), 1961-1971.
  • Rowe, D. W. (2018). Research & policy: The unrealized promise of emergent writing: Reimagining the way forward for early writing instruction. Language Arts, 95(4), 229-241.
  • Seoane, R. C., Wang, J., Cao, Y., & Kim, Y. S. G. (2025). Unpacking the relation between oral language and written composition: A meta-analysis. Review of Educational Research, 00346543251320359.
  • Young, R. & Ferguson, F. (2021). Writing For Pleasure: Theory, Research and Practice. Routledge.
  • Young, R. & Ferguson, F. (2022). The Science of Teaching Primary Writing. The Writing For Pleasure Centre.
  • Young, R. & Ferguson, F. (2024) The different perspectives you can take on teaching early writing. https://writing4pleasure.com/2024/03/15/the-different-perspectives-you-can-take-on-teaching-early-writing/
  • Young, R. & Ferguson, F. (2025) Visualising The Science Of Writing: The Writing Map Explained. https://writing4pleasure.com/2025/02/27/visualising-the-science-of-writing-the-writing-map-explained/
  • Young, R. & Ferguson, F. (2026). Debunking edu-myths: Children should only write words they can spell. https://writing4pleasure.com/2026/02/26/debunking-edu-myths-children-should-only-write-words-they-can-spell/

Debunking edu-myths: Oral composition should replace early writing

In some early classrooms, children compose sentences aloud while an adult writes them down. The intention is usually a good one. Teachers recognise that handwriting and spelling can place heavy demands on young writers and they want children to focus on their ideas rather than struggle with transcription.

However, this practice can unintentionally create a powerful misconception: that composing aloud is an appropriate substitute for writing.

When adult scribing becomes the main way children โ€˜writeโ€™, children may learn that writing is something adults do for them rather than something they are utterly capable of doing for themselves.

This is problematic because writing development depends on children practising both composition and transcription together.ยน Fortunately, early writing strategies such as emergent writing and โ€˜kid writingโ€™ allow children to do exactly that from the very beginning of Nursery.ยฒ

What oral composition gets right

Oral rehearsal is a powerful tool for young writers. Saying your texts, sentences, phrases and words before you transcribe them to paper helps children:

  • Organise their ideas.
  • Gauge peopleโ€™s reactions to their ideas before they commit them to paper.
  • Hear and adjust their sentence structures.
  • Try out vocabulary choices.

Teachers should model oral rehearsal strategies regularly in writing lessons and make it part and parcel of childrenโ€™s writing process.ยณ For example:

โ€œLet me look at my drawing. Ah, yes. I want to write about Buster, my dog, running to the front door to see me. Let me say the sentence first: Buster ran to the door to see me.โ€

This kind of modelling shows children that writers plan language before writing it down.

Talk also plays a crucial role in writing development. When children discuss ideas, characters and events, they practice the language structures that later appear in written texts. Opportunities to talk about texts at a discourse level (whole ideas, narratives and information) are strongly associated with later writing success.โด

The problem arises when oral composition replaces writing rather than supports it.

When talking replaces writing

If children rarely attempt to record their own ideas on paper, they lose opportunities to develop two essential abilities:

  • Transcription โ€“ forming letters and spelling words on the page.
  • Composition โ€“ shaping ideas into written language.

We know writing develops through the interaction of composition and transcription.ยน 

When adults do the writing, that learning opportunity disappears. Children may still generate ideas orally but they do not practice:

  • Segmenting sounds.
  • Choosing letters.
  • Shaping sentences on the page.
  • Managing the physical act of writing.

Over time, this can lead to slower development in both transcription and composition.โต

What emergent writing makes possible

Emergent writing recognises an important developmental truth: Children can communicate meaning in writing long before they master conventional spelling and handwriting.

Young children often combine several forms of representation in a single piece of writing:

  • Drawings.
  • Marks and shapes.
  • Letter-like forms.
  • Conventional letters and words.

Together, these elements carry meaning. Typically, the drawing represents the main idea, while the marks and letters represent specific words or phrases.

The resulting text may not resemble conventional adult writing but it is still genuine composition. The child is deciding:

  • What to say.
  • How best to represent it on paper.

This allows children to begin composing texts from the very start of Nursery or Reception.ยฒ

The role of โ€˜kid writingโ€™

Once phonics and encoding instruction are introduced (in earnest), children should transition to using โ€˜kid writingโ€™. This is where children write their words and phrases using a mixture of:

  • Conventional spelling for words they do know.
  • โ€˜Informed spellingsโ€™ based on their phonics knowledge.
  • A line for the sounds or words they donโ€™t know how to spell yet.

The typical process would look like this:

  • The child looks at their drawing.
  • The child says their sentence aloud.
  • The child transcribes what they know to paper.
  • The teacher undertakes underwriting to provide the conventional adult spellings underneath.

โ€˜Kid writingโ€™

This approach achieves two goals. The child controls the composition and attempts the spelling. The teacher still exposes the child to correct written forms.

Why independent writing matters

When children commit their own writing ideas to paper, several important learning processes occur:

  1. They practice encoding. Each informed spelling requires children to segment sounds and select letters. This strengthens their phoneme-grapheme knowledge.โต
  2. They practice sentence construction. Children must decide how to express their ideas in written language. This develops their early compositional skills.โถ
  3. They see themselves as writers. Ownership matters. When children produce their own texts, they begin to view writing as something they can do independently – without constant adult supervision or intervention.โท
  4. They write more. Children who are allowed to control their compositional process produce plenty of texts. Increased writing frequency and volume will invariably lead to faster compositional (and transcriptional) development.

What happens when adult scribing dominates

When early writing experiences are replaced by a heavy reliance on adult scribes and oral composition, several limitations will emerge. Children learn that: 

  • Writing requires adult assistance.
  • Writing is a performance for the teacher rather than an independent act.

At the same time: 

  • Opportunities to practice encoding decrease.
  • Writing frequency and volume drop.

The result is slower progress in both transcription and composition.ยน

What effective early writing instruction looks like

Strong early writing classrooms combine several elements:โต

  • Daily phonics instruction.
  • Daily handwriting instruction and practice.
  • Spelling instruction.
  • Loads of meaningful, motivating and engaging writing experiences.

Within these classrooms:

  • Children learn to talk about their ideas.
  • Drawings are accepted as supporting children to transfer their ideas from their mind onto paper in preparation for transcribing.
  • Emergent writing, โ€˜kid writingโ€™ and informed spellings are used as temporary scaffolds while transcription is developing.
  • Teachers engage in underwriting alongside their pupils.

In this environment, oral rehearsal supports writing rather than replaces it. Children speak their ideas, draw their ideas, and then write them. And most importantly, they learn from the very beginning that writing is something they can do themselves.โท

Children learn a lot about writing by writingโ€ฆ

References

  1. The research on developing childrenโ€™s transcription and compositional skills [LINK]; Visualising The Science Of Writing: The Writing Map Explained [LINK]
  2. Debunking edu-myths: โ€˜Emergent writingโ€™ isnโ€™t necessary before teaching children to write [LINK]; Supporting childrenโ€™s early word writing [LINK]; Debunking edu-myths: Children should only write words they can spell [LINK]
  3. Developing Childrenโ€™s Talk For Writing [LINK]
  4. Kim, Y. S. G., Park, C., & Park, Y. (2015). Dimensions of discourse level oral language skills and their relation to reading comprehension and written composition: An exploratory study. Reading and Writing, 28(5), 633-654. [LINK]
  5. Supporting childrenโ€™s early word writing [LINK]
  6. How do we develop writing fluency? [LINK]
  7. Getting children up and running as writers [LINK]; How to teach writing in the EYFS [LINK

*NEW ONLINE TRAINING ANNOUNCEMENT* Improving childrenโ€™s reading AND writing: Connecting research and practice

Improving childrenโ€™s reading AND writing: Connecting research and practice

Five online sessions focusing on children’s reading and writing will take place across April-June from 4pm – 5pm. These sessions are designed forย UK primary school teachers, primary school leaders, literacy leads and education consultants.ย 

The sessions are designed to provide research insights to support childrenโ€™s reading and writing acquisition and development. With a focus on supporting both reading and writing skill, all those attending will have greater access and insight into contemporary research to inform their classroom practice.

Participants will gain insight into implications for practice, a curated collection of key open access research articles and, if all sessions are attended, a certificate of completion.

Sessions can be booked individually for ยฃ15 each or all four sessions can be booked at a discounted price of ยฃ50.

Sessions overview

Free webinar: 

Supporting reading for pleasure in primary schools: Examining the evidence and children’s perspectives – Tuesday 14 April, 16:00- 17:00pm

Delivered by Professor Sarah McGeown

Supporting children to reading for pleasure is a key priority in this National Year of Reading, but which โ€˜reading for pleasureโ€™ practices work?  This session will explore common practices, from independent reading and teacher read-aloud, to book-talk, reading diaries, annual celebrations, and the use of rewards.  It will examine the research evidence, and childrenโ€™s perspectives of these practices, to provide teachers with useful insights to support their classroom practice. 

Four paid online sessions:

Session 1: Learning to read – Thursday 30 April 2026, 16:00-17:00pm

Delivered by Professor Sarah McGeown

This session highlights the core skills underpinning reading development, research-informed practice to support childrenโ€™s word reading, and the importance of nurturing an early love and interest in books, words, and stories. 

Session 2: Reading motivation and engagement – Thursday 14 May 2026, 16:00-17:00pm

Delivered by Professor Sarah McGeown

This session provides insight into the importance of reading motivation and engagement throughout primary school, research-informed principles to support reading engagement, and the reading, language, social and emotional benefits accrued from reading.

Session 3: Learning to write – Monday 1 June 2026, 16:00-17:00pm

Delivered by Ross Young

This session explores key aspects of writing development, research-informed strategies to support children as apprentice writers, and the importance of nurturing a lifelong love of writing.

Session 4: Writing motivation and engagement – Monday 22 June 2026, 16:00-17:00pm

Delivered by Ross Young

This session provides insight into the importance of writing motivation and engagement throughout primary school, research-informed principles to support childrenโ€™s engagement with writing, and the social, emotional, and expressive benefits gained through the experience of being a young writer.ย 

Biographies

Professor Sarah McGeown is Director of the University of Edinburghโ€™s Literacy Lab. She has published widely in academic and professional journals, with research focusing on early reading acquisition and development to motivation and engagement in reading. She is an advocate for research-practice partners and closing the gap between research and practice to improve childrenโ€™s reading experiences and outcomes. 

Ross Young is a former primary school teacher and co-founder of The Writing for Pleasure Centre. His work focuses on translating writing research into effective classroom practice, and he regularly collaborates with teachers and children in schools. He has written several books on teaching writing and leads professional development through organisations such as the UKLA. Ross is currently a PhD researcher at the University of Edinburghโ€™s Literacy Lab, studying childrenโ€™s writing lives in partnership with the National Literacy Trust. 

Beware creating a transcriptional bottleneck in your writing classroom

Teachers are often warned that transcription is a cognitive bottleneck in writing. The argument goes like this: because young writers must devote so much attention to letter formation and spelling, asking them to compose their own writing creates cognitive overload.

There is truth in this claim. We want children to master transcription as a matter of priority. While children are still learning transcription skills such as handwriting and spelling, these processes can place heavy demands on childrenโ€™s working memory. When this happens, childrenโ€™s compositions will not be as good as they could be. This is one reason why explicit instruction in handwriting, phonics and spelling is so important.

However, a misunderstanding often follows from this insight. Some educators conclude that children should not compose their own texts until transcription has reached a certain level of mastery. In other words, transcription becomes a necessary prerequisite for composition.

This conclusion is not supported by writing research.ยน

Writing development does not happen in a strict sequence

This confusion often arises when ideas from reading theory are applied directly to writing. The Simple View of Reading explains that reading comprehension depends on two components: decoding and language comprehension. But this model does not prescribe how writing should be taught. 

Research on writing points to a different relationship between transcription and composition. In the Simple View of Writing, transcription and composition are understood as interacting processes that develop alongside each other over time.

While weak transcription can certainly constrain composition, the solution is not to delay composing. Instead, research suggests that both capacities should be developed concurrently.ยน

Children improve their transcription not only through explicit instruction but also through frequent and meaningful writing opportunities.ยฒ

When transcription becomes a barrier

Ironically, we can create the very bottleneck we are trying to avoid! Transcription becomes a barrier when educationalists expect children to write like adults. When this happens, children receive an implicit message:

  • Only write words you can spell correctly
  • Limit your vocabulary use
  • Keep your ideas simple

The result is predictable. Writing becomes constrained and demotivating.

How young children already solve this bottleneck problem

Studies have shown that young writers actually develop strategies that allow them to express ideas before their transcription is fully fluent. These include:

  1. Emergent writing. Young children may combine drawings, marks, letter-like forms and some conventional letters to communicate meaning.ยณ
  2. Informed spelling. Children attempt spellings based on their ever developing understanding of sounds in words (for example, writing TRNSRS for tyrannosaurus).โด
  3. โ€œKid writingโ€. A mixture of lines and conventional spelling within the same text.โต

All these strategies are rich with evidence of learning.

Research shows that childrenโ€™s early spellings often reflect their developing phonological and morphological knowledge. When teachers invite children to attempt spellings in this way, they gain valuable insight into what children currently understand about sounds, letters, morphology and orthography.

Incidentally, children who are encouraged to write using these strategies go on to become stronger readers and writers than those who donโ€™t.โด 

If you donโ€™t want transcription to become a bottleneck for your pupils, donโ€™t allow it to be.

Why allowing these strategies matters

When classrooms allow these forms of early writing, several important things happen.

  • ALL children can begin composing immediately. A child who wants to write about a tyrannosaurus does not need to know the conventional spelling before attempting the word. Every child can begin their writing journey from their very first day of Nursery.
  • Children write more, and more happily. More writing means more opportunities to connect sounds with letters and to apply their transcriptional knowledge in meaningful contexts.
  • Childrenโ€™s ideas no longer need be constrained by their transcription. Children can experiment with ambitious vocabulary and compositions without fear. they can get it all down on paper.
  • Transcription continues to improve. Through explicit instruction in phonics, handwriting and spelling and frequent writing opportunities, children continue their journey towards mastering transcription early in their school lives.โดย 

In other words, transcription develops by:

  • Providing explicit instruction in letter formation, handwriting, phonics and spelling.โถ
  • Teaching children strategies for encoding words, including writing โ€˜informed spellingsโ€™.
  • Using emergent and โ€˜kid writingโ€™ as temporary scaffolds while transcription is being developed (in earnest).
  • Planning loads of meaningful, motivating and engaging writing opportunities so children can compose their own texts.

When these elements are in place, transcription does not prevent children from becoming writers. Instead, it develops alongside their growing joy and ability to express their ideas.

References

  1. The research on developing childrenโ€™s transcription and compositional skills [LINK]
  2. Visualising The Science Of Writing: The Writing Map Explained [LINK]
  3. Debunking edu-myths: โ€˜Emergent writingโ€™ isnโ€™t necessary before teaching children to write [LINK]
  4. Supporting childrenโ€™s early word writing [LINK]
  5. Debunking edu-myths: Children should only write words they can spell [LINK]
  6. Spelling and handwriting provision: A checklist [LINK]

*NEW BOOK* How To Teach Poetry In KS1

How To Teach Poetry Writing In KS1, authored by Felicity Ferguson and Ross Young, is a comprehensive guide designed to transform the way poetry is taught in your classroom.

This eBook provides a practical, step-by-step roadmap for teachers to lead children through the entire journey of creating their own poetry anthologies. The guide encourages a pedagogy of structure, freedom and playfulness, allowing pupils to “live the poetโ€™s life” by writing about what they are most passionate and knowledgeable about.

Key features include:

  • Complete project plans: Systematic, colour-coded guides for carrying out poetry units from initial idea generation to the final publication.
  • A wealth of lessons: Short, direct instructional sessions covering poetic โ€˜craft movesโ€™ such as alliteration, onomatopoeia, personification, and sensory detail.
  • Guidance on selecting and using mentor texts: Strategies for using commercial books and teacher-written poems to inspire young writers.
  • Support for every writer: Specific, actionable advice for supporting pupils with SEND pupils and English language learners, ensuring the writing community is inclusive.

Whether you are a confident writer-teacher, or someone who has previously struggled with teaching poetry, this guide offers the tools and inspiration needed to create a vibrant community of young poets who write with pleasure and purpose.

Individual license – ยฃ10.95

School/Institution license – ยฃ54.75

or FREE for members

Debunking edu-myths: Children should only write words they can spell

Hi Ross and Phil. I recently went to some training and it was recommended that we should only be modelling and asking children to write sentences that are at their current phonics level. 

I understand the place for this in phonics and spelling lessons but it would surely limit their development in writing lessons? What does the research say?

The myth

Children should only write words they can spell conventionally. If they cannot spell a word correctly, they should not attempt it. Writing should be restricted to their current phonics level. This is the best way to develop childrenโ€™s early word writing.

Unfortunately, research would suggest that the opposite is true. The idea that children must only write what they can spell is an outdated pedagogy that prioritises neatness of books over childrenโ€™s learning.

Where this myth comes from

Some early literacy programmes erroneously adopt a reading-first orientation. In this view, writing should only be used in the service of learning phonics. This orientation is not supported by research evidence [LINK].

Restricting childrenโ€™s oral language development is a bad idea

Before discussing anything else, this narrow focus restricts childrenโ€™s oral language development. Children use fewer words and arenโ€™t obliged to talk at the โ€˜discourse levelโ€™. This is a problem. Studies have shown that discourse-level talk is possibly the single strongest predictor of later writing success [LINK].

Writing is more than transcription

When we limit children to words they can spell, we aren’t teaching them to write, we are teaching them to copy. As the DfEโ€™s Writing Framework makes clear, transcription is not writing. Research on early writing development shows that transcription and composition should be developed together [LINK, LINK]. 

The youngest of children can already write

Children begin writing before they can spell words. First, we have their emergent writing which includes marks, scribbles and letter strings [LINK]. Then we have โ€˜kid writingโ€™. This is a mixture of marks and conventional โ€˜adult writingโ€™ [LINK]. Children use marks when they donโ€™t know and โ€˜adult writingโ€™ when they do know. 

Take this example.

This childโ€™s writing shows their developing understanding of spelling. They are showing us that they do know:

  • How to write initial and some final consonant sounds
  • They can write phonetically plausible spellings like D-nosaw
  • They are conscientious in identifying and copying the spellings of high-frequency words from the word wall.
  • The child has the confidence to use the vocabulary they really want to use (dinosaur) rather than โ€˜playing it safeโ€™ by using a simpler word (cat).

What they are showing us they donโ€™t know yet:

  • They struggle with vowels in more complex words, using their โ€˜kid writingโ€™ for the missing sounds.

Hereโ€™s another example:

They are showing us that they do know:

  • How to represent initial consonant blends (e.g. sn- sp-).
  • How to hear and record some dominant consonant sounds within words (e.g. -gg).
  • How to correctly spell some high-frequency words such as Tom, up, on, and his.
  • That they will happily attempt any vocabulary that they really want to use. For example, snuggle and special. They do this rather than simplifying their ideas.

This child is demonstrating strong phonemic awareness. They are segmenting words and making deliberate decisions about what โ€˜adult writingโ€™ they can confidently represent. The use of โ€˜kid writingโ€™ for unknown sounds shows strategic problem-solving. They are not abandoning the word; they are marking the gap in their knowledge and moving on. This helps them maintain their compositional flow while letting their teacher know what they still need to work on.

Hereโ€™s what they are showing us they donโ€™t know yet:

  • How to represent vowels within more complex syllables.
  • How to map less salient internal sounds in polysyllabic words.
  • Conventional spellings for digraphs and suffixes within longer words.

Overall, these pieces reflect children who see themselves as writers. They hold composition and word choice in high regard and use temporary spelling strategies to ensure that their ideas are fully expressed.

If weโ€™d simply asked these children to write down words we already knew they could spell, we would have learnt very little. This โ€˜kid writingโ€™ is not a collection of random errors. It reflects a childโ€™s ever growing phonological awareness and letter knowledge. This is how early word writing is developed [LINK].

Importantly for us as teachers, childrenโ€™s โ€˜kid writingโ€™ (also known as using โ€˜sound spellingsโ€™ or โ€˜informed spellingsโ€™) shows us what our pupils do know about phoneme-grapheme correspondence and what they donโ€™t know yet. This can then inform our teaching. 

Encouraging children to use โ€˜informed spellingsโ€™ is actually best practice

Research shows that encouraging children to write โ€˜informed spellingsโ€™ strengthens their phonemic awareness and orthographic mapping and actually helps them learn conventional spelling faster than if they simply copied out a word they already know how to spell. Children who are encouraged to engage in writing โ€˜informed spellingsโ€™ make greater gains in reading and spelling than those who are denied the opportunity [LINK, LINK, LINK].

Spelling โ€˜errorsโ€™ donโ€™t turn into bad habits

The misconception that โ€˜mistakesโ€™ form bad habits also underpins this edu-myth. This fear is unsupported [LINK]. Spelling is developmental. Just as a child crawls before they walk, they use โ€˜informed spellingsโ€™ before learning conventional ones. As children continue to receive explicit phonics and spelling instruction, and participate in lots of meaningful reading and writing experiences, their spelling develops [LINK]. For example:

From โ€˜Supporting childrenโ€™s early word writingโ€™ [LINK]

Childrenโ€™s use of sound spellings is an opportunity for responsive teaching

Sound spellings show childrenโ€™s current understanding. When teachers validate a childโ€™s attempt and then provide the conventional spelling through underwriting, this dual attention supports childrenโ€™s transcription and compositional development in a healthy way.

Vocabulary use matters

Vocabulary use is an important part of childrenโ€™s writing development [LINK]. When children are told they should only write words they can spell, their expressive language and โ€˜writing worldโ€™ shrinks. To cap a childโ€™s intellectual expression is to restrict them to the level of a toddler. They will use fewer words. They tell fewer detailed stories. They are denied the opportunity to share exactly what they mean.

How should I model my own writing as a writer-teacher?

When you model writing, aim to write at your pupilsโ€™ current level or slightly beyond it. Your role is to model delight in composition while strengthening childrenโ€™s spelling knowledge and encoding strategies.

If a word contains phoneme-grapheme correspondence the class has not been taught, you have three options. Choose based on your purpose at that moment.

  1. Model how to use the โ€˜kid writingโ€™ strategy Say something like: โ€œWhen I was your age, I wouldnโ€™t have known that bit of โ€˜adult writingโ€™ yet so I would have used my โ€˜kid writingโ€™. When this happens to you, you can use this strategy too.โ€ This shows children that: writers attempt ambitious words, it is acceptable to use โ€˜kid writingโ€™ for unknown sounds, and spelling knowledge grows over time.
  1. Teach it Stop and teach it but keep it tight: (1) say the phoneme or morpheme, (2) show the grapheme and (3) link it to any prior learning. Then continue writing.
  1. Use the spelling and move on Sometimes you simply write the conventional spelling and carry on without comment or fuss.

Each option protects compositional flow. Each option strengthens childrenโ€™s understanding of encoding. Most importantly, none of them restrict or otherwise undermine childrenโ€™s ability to write for themselves.

What effective practice looks like

Research supports:

  • Phonics instruction to help develop childrenโ€™s encoding skills
  • Encouragement of emergent writing and then โ€˜kid writingโ€™ from the earliest stages
  • The explicit teaching and modelling of encoding strategies
  • Using childrenโ€™s informed sound spellings as evidence of their developing phonological awareness, orthographic mapping and overall spelling development
  • Providing children with verbal feedback and undertaking underwriting alongside pupils
  • Using a writing approach which supports developing childrenโ€™s transcription, composition and oral language together
  • Providing lots of meaningful writing experiences

Put simply, children become better spellers by trying to spell the words they want to write most.

References and further reading

  1. The different perspectives you can take on teaching early writing [LINK]
  2. Visualising the science of writing: The writing map explained [LINK]
  3. The research on developing childrenโ€™s transcription and compositional skills [LINK]
  4. Supporting childrenโ€™s early word writing [LINK]
  5. Ouellette, G., and Sรฉnรฉchal, M. (2008). Exploring the cognitive and linguistic underpinnings of invented spelling. Scientific Studies of Reading, 12, 195 to 219. [LINK]
  6. Kim, Y. S. G., & Graham, S. (2022). Expanding the Direct and Indirect Effects Model of Writing (DIEW): Readingโ€“writing relations, and dynamic relations as a function of measurement/dimensions of written composition. Journal of Educational Psychology, 114(2), 215. [LINK]
  7. Feldgus, E. G., Cardonick, I., & Gentry, J. R. (2017). Kid writing in the 21st century: A systematic approach to phonics, spelling, and writing workshop. Hameray Publishing Group [LINK]
  8. Teaching encoding [LINK]
  9. Debunking edu myths: writing errors form bad habits [LINK]
  10. The rise of elaborate dictation in English schools: unethical writing teaching [LINK]
  11. Transcription and oral language are key to childrenโ€™s early writing development [LINK]
  12. Debunking edu-myths: โ€œIn Reception and Year One, composition is less relevantโ€ [LINK]
  13. Debunking edu-myths: โ€˜Emergent writingโ€™ isnโ€™t necessary before teaching children to write [LINK]

Our subject knowledge series: What writer-teachers need to know. #4 ‘Writerโ€™s block is part of writing’ – Donald Murray

Welcome to our new blog series where BIG WRITING IDEAS ARE SIMPLY EXPLAINED! This series is dedicated to sharing key subject knowledge that can make you a better teacher of writing.

Each month, we will share a new concept or figure with you. Over time, we hope this series can build up your expertise. To follow the series, simply sign up to our newsletter here.

This month, we are looking at Donald Murray.

๐Ÿ“ฃ Writerโ€™s block is part of writing

โ€œSometimes not writing is part of writing.โ€


๐Ÿง  The big idea

In The Essential Delay (1978), Donald Murray reframed so-called writerโ€™s block as an essential part of the writing process. Rather than seeing students sitting and thinking as a lesson failure, Murray distinguished between avoidance (true block) and the need for incubation time (the necessary delay while ideas form, connections surface, and the writerโ€™s purpose clarifies). He urges teachers to help students recognise that the writing process includes productive silences and that pressure to rush to the page can actually undermine their deeper thinking and the quality of their writing.


๐Ÿ›๏ธ In context

YearEvent
1978Murray publishes The Essential Delay: When Writerโ€™s Block Isnโ€™t
1980sRise of process theory, with emphasis on invention and prewriting
TodayMurrayโ€™s insights inform process-based writing instruction

๐Ÿ” Core concepts

๐Ÿ”บ Incubation vs. block
Not all inactivity is avoidance. It’s often preparation and thinking.
๐ŸŒฑ โ€œThe mind is working even when the pen is still.โ€

๐Ÿ”บ Writing is recursive
The writing process involves looping back, pausing and waiting for insight.
โ™ป๏ธ โ€œDelay can be the space where ideas ripen.โ€

๐Ÿ”บ Patience in process
Good writing can require time away from the page.


๐Ÿ‘ค Key figure

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Donald M. Murray
Pulitzer Prizeโ€“winning journalist and influential composition theorist. His work emphasised writing as discovery and the value of process over product.


๐Ÿ› ๏ธ In the writing classroom

โœ… Encourage freewriting, conversation and brainstorming during stuck moments.
โœ… Model and normalise pauses during writing time.
โœ… Avoid seeing students sitting and thinking as always being procrastination.


โš–๏ธ Criticism and debate

๐Ÿ”ธ Some fear that normalising delay supports student avoidance.
๐Ÿ”ธ Others note that not all writers can afford long incubation due to tight deadlines.
๐Ÿ”ธ Still, Murrayโ€™s approach remains a touchstone for compassionate, process-based instruction.


๐Ÿ’ฌ Famous quote

โ€œSitting and thinking is not failure – it’s part of the work.โ€


Find out more:

  • A Writer Reforms (The Teaching Of Writing) Donald Murray & The Writing Process Movement, 1963-187ย by Michael J. Michaud [LINK]
  • Teach Writing As A Process Not Productย by Donald Murray [LINK]
  • Write to Learnย by Donald Murrayย [LINK]
  • Expecting The Unexpected: Teaching Myself- And Others- To Read And Write by Donald Murray [LINK]
  • A Writer Teaches Writingย by Donald Murray [LINK]
  • The Essential Don Murray: Lessons from Americaโ€™s Greatest Writing Teacherย by Thomas Newkirk & Lisa C. Miller [LINK]

Previous entries in the series

  1. โ€˜Writing as a processโ€™ โ€“ Donald Murray [LINK]
  2. โ€˜The cognitive process modelโ€™ โ€“ Linda Flowers & John Hayes [LINK]
  3. ‘S*** first draftsโ€™ โ€“ Anne Lamott [LINK]

Our subject knowledge series: What writer-teachers need to know. #3 ‘S*** first drafts’ – Anne Lamott

Welcome to our new blog series where BIG WRITING IDEAS ARE SIMPLY EXPLAINED! This series is dedicated to sharing key subject knowledge that can make you a better teacher of writing.

Each month, we will share a new concept or figure with you. Over time, we hope this series can build up your expertise. To follow the series, simply sign up to our newsletter here.

This month, we are looking at Anne Lamott.

๐Ÿ“ฃ S*** first drafts

โ€œAlmost all good writing begins with terrible first efforts.โ€


๐Ÿง  The big idea

In her widely loved essay โ€˜S*** First Drafts,โ€™ Anne Lamott reframes the messy beginnings of writing as not just inevitable but essential. She argues that no writers (not even professionals) sit down and produce a polished draft in one go. Instead, the first draft is a private, exploratory space where the only job is to get words onto the page. Revision is where real writing happens.


๐Ÿ›๏ธ In context

YearEvent
1994Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life published [LINK].
TodayFrequently assigned in creative writing and professional writing contexts.

๐Ÿ” Core concepts

๐Ÿ”บ Permission to write badly
The first draft doesnโ€™t need to be good โ€” it just needs to exist.
โœ๏ธ โ€œYou canโ€™t fix what you havenโ€™t written.โ€

๐Ÿ”บ Silencing the inner critic
Worrying about quality too early kills creativity and momentum.
๐Ÿคซ โ€œTurn off the perfectionist voice until later.โ€

๐Ÿ”บ Writing as process
Good writing emerges through multiple drafts, each with its own purpose.
๐Ÿ”„ โ€œDrafting is discovery.โ€

๐Ÿ”บ Private first drafts
Your first draft is for you alone โ€” no one else needs to see it.
๐Ÿ”’ โ€œThe mess can stay behind the curtain.โ€


๐Ÿ‘ค Key figure

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Anne Lamott
Novelist, memoirist, and writing teacher known for her humorous, candid, and compassionate approach to the writing life. Bird by Bird is considered a modern classic on writing.


๐Ÿ› ๏ธ In the writing classroom

โœ… Model low-stakes drafting to lower studentsโ€™ writing anxiety.
โœ… Use freewriting exercises to encourage children’s risk-taking.
โœ… Model the use of revisions strategies as part of class writing projects to normalise revising.
โœ… Discuss professional authorsโ€™ drafting habits to demystify the process.


โš–๏ธ Criticism and debate

๐Ÿ”ธ Some worry it gives children license to turn in underdeveloped manuscripts without revision.
๐Ÿ”ธ Others note it risks romanticising โ€˜chaosโ€™ without teaching concrete revision strategies.
๐Ÿ”ธ Still, itโ€™s widely praised for reducing perfectionism and developing a healthier and more realistic writing mindset.


๐Ÿ’ฌ Famous quote

โ€œThe first draft of anything is s***โ€ – Ernest Hemingway


Find out more:

  • Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life by Anne Lamott [LINK]
  • Freewriting by Peter Elbow [LINK]
  • Real-World Writers: A Handbook for Teaching Writing With 7-11 Year Olds by Ross Young & Felicity Ferguson [LINK]

Previous entries in the series

  1. โ€˜Writing as a processโ€™ โ€“ Donald Murray [LINK]
  2. โ€˜The cognitive process modelโ€™ โ€“ Linda Flowers & John Hayes [LINK]