Why Students Should Write in All Subjects
Writing improves learning by consolidating information in long-term memory, researchers explain. Plus, five engaging writing activities to use in all subjects.
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Go to My Saved Content.For Kyle Pahigian, a 10th-grade math teacher at University Park Campus School in Massachusetts, a lesson on congruent triangles doesnât start with calculators and protractors. Instead, she hands her students a treasure map and asks them to write detailed directionsâusing landmarks as a guideâto the buried treasure.
âI wonât tell the kids right away, âToday weâre going to learn about triangle congruence theorems,ââ said Pahigian. âI want them to instead view it as them experimenting with something and doing something that they feel like theyâre really good at.â Students often feel intimidated by math, and transforming the activity into a writing exercise eases some of the anxiety of introducing difficult concepts, she said.
In Pahigianâs math class, writing is regularly used as a learning strategy, one that gives her a window into her studentsâ thinking. âI like to do low-stakes writing when weâre coming up with definitions,â said Pahigian. Instead of telling her students what a polygon is, for example, sheâll show them a set of polygons and a set of non-polygons, and ask them, âWhat do you notice? What differences do you see?â Students spend a few minutes writing down their answers, and then join groups to compare responses.
âItâs really interesting and fun for me to read what theyâve written, because I can see all the questions. I can see the process,â said Pahigian.
A sheds light on why writing is such a beneficial activityânot just in subjects typically associated with writing, like history and English, but across all subjects. Professor Steve Graham and his colleagues at Arizona State Universityâs Teachers College analyzed 56 studies looking at the benefits of writing in science, social studies, and math and found that writing âreliably enhanced learningâ across all grade levels. While teachers commonly ask students to write about a topic in order to assess how well they understand the material, the process of writing also improves a studentâs ability to recall information, make connections between different concepts, and synthesize information in new ways. In effect, writing isnât just a tool to assess learning, it also promotes it.
Strengthening Memories
Why is writing effective? âWriting about content material facilitates learning by consolidating information in long-term memory,â explain Graham and his colleagues, describing a process known as the retrieval effect. As previous research has shown, information is quickly forgotten if itâs not reinforced, and writing helps to strengthen a studentâs memories of the material theyâre learning.
Itâs the same cognitive mechanism that explains why practice tests are effective: In a 2014 study, students who took low-stakes practice tests in science and history classes scored 16 percentage points higher on their final exams than students who simply studied the material. âPracticing retrieval of recently studied information enhances the likelihood of the learner retrieving that information in the future,â the researchers of the 2014 study said.
Writing about a topic also encourages students to process information at a deeper level. Answering multiple-choice or short-answer questions may help with factual recall, but putting thoughts on paper encourages students to evaluate different ideas, weighing the importance of each one and considering the order they should be presented in, Graham and his colleagues write. By doing so, students may make new connections between ideas, ones they may not have made when initially learning the information.
A Metacognitive Tool
Students often believe that they understand a topic, but if theyâre asked to write it downâand explain itâgaps in their understanding may be revealed. One of the most effective writing strategies that Graham and his colleagues found was metacognitive prompting, in which students are asked not only to recall information but also to apply what theyâve learned to different contexts by thinking about multiple sides of a position or making predictions based on what they currently know. For example, instead of simply reading about ecosystems in a textbook, students can write about their own impact by examining how much trash their household produces or the environmental impact of producing the food they eat.
5 Writing Strategies to Use in Any Subject
Here are a variety of ideas teachers have shared with ÁůşĎ˛Ę˛ĘĆą in recent years on incorporating writing into a variety of subjects.
âI wonderâ journals: At Crellin Elementary School in Oakland, Maryland, teachers encouraged students to ask âI wonderâ questions to push their learning beyond the classroom. After visiting a local barn and garden, for example, Dave Miller realized his fifth-grade students had more questions about animals and plants than he had time to answer, so he had them write down anything they were confused or curious about, which helped him plan future lessons and experiments.
âIf they donât wonder, âHow would we ever survive on the moon?â then thatâs never going to be explored,â said Dana McCauley, Crellinâs principal. âBut that doesnât mean they should stop wondering, because wonderings lead to thinking outside the box, which makes them critical thinkers. As they try to figure it out, and reflect on what theyâre doing, thatâs where it all ties together for them. Thatâs where all that learning occursâwhere all the connections start being made.â
Travel journals: Every student at Normal Park Museum Magnet, a Kâ8 school in Chattanooga, Tennessee, created a travel journal to chart their learning. These journals included not only charts, drawings, and graphic organizers, but also writing and reflection pieces that capture studentsâ learning about a topic.
When fifth-grade teacher Denver Huffstutler began a unit on earth science, he asked his students to imagine they were explorers looking for a new world that could sustain life. In their travel journal, they kept track of everything they were learning, from the impact of man-made disasters to their designs and calculations for a manned rocket that could reach distant planets.
Low-stakes writing: Writing can be daunting, so teachers at University Park Campus School used daily low-stakes writing activities to foster student voice, self-confidence, and critical thinking skillsâa school-wide strategy used in every subject.
âThe most important thing about it for me is that itâs not censored, and itâs not too highly structured,â said seventh-grade science teacher James Kobialka. âItâs about them getting their own ideas down, and then being able to interact with those ideas, change them, and revise them if theyâre not correct.â
For example, when Kobialkaâs students were learning about the conservation of mass, he didnât start by defining itâhe showed them a picture and asked, âWhat do you notice about the atoms on both sides? How can you explain that?â Students wrote down their observations, and the entire class came up with a definition. âFrom there,â he said, âonce that consensus is formed, Iâll ask somebody to write it on the board, and weâll talk about the key concepts.â
Student-created magazines: In Alessandra Kingâs algebra class, students created a magazine with dozens of articles about real world applications of math. For each article, they selected a primary sourceâan article from Scientific American, for exampleâread it closely, and then wrote a summary. Students wrote about a range of topics, from gerrymandering to fractals in Jackson Pollockâs paintings to invisibility cloaks.
âEffective writing clarifies and organizes a studentâs thoughts, and the slow pace of writing is conducive to student learning because it allows them to reason carefully to make sure theyâre correct before they state their thoughts,â King wrote. âStudies have shown that writing is valuable specifically for the math classroomâfor example, it seems that a studentâs ability to explain concepts in writing is related to the ability to comprehend and apply them.â
Creative writing: Former teachers Ed Kang and Amy Schwartzbach-Kang incorporated storytelling and creative writing into their after-school programâs science lessons. For example, they asked students to imagine a creature that could survive in a local habitatâthe Chicago River, in their case. What color would it be? What features would help it to survive and defend itself? How would it hunt its prey? Students then wrote a story about their creature that combined science concepts with creative storytelling.
âThereâs brain science to support using stories to help kids engage with content and create personal meaning,â explained Kang, who has a Ph.D. in neuroscience. âListening to facts mainly stimulates the two language-processing areas of the brain. However, when we listen to a story, additional parts of the brain are also activatedâregions involved with our senses and motor movements help listeners actually âfeelâ the descriptions.â