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Sentence Writing: The Overlooked Element of the Science of Reading

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W304AB

Interactive Session
Recorded Session
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Session description

Many classrooms advance in evidence-based reading, yet students still struggle with sentences—an overlooked pillar of the Science of Reading. This session explores sentence writing’s role in literacy, offers K–5 educators practical routines and assessments, and shows how strong sentences support decoding, fluency, syntax, and comprehension.

Outline

1. Welcome, Purpose & Framing the Problem (10 minutes)
•Content: Introduce the challenge: students advance in reading yet often struggle to write complete, clear sentences. Frame sentence writing as a missing pillar of the Science of Reading.
•Engagement:
o Quick poll (device-based or show of hands): “Which is harder for your students: reading comprehension or writing strong sentences?”
o Think-Pair-Share: Educators briefly discuss student struggles with sentence writing.
• Process: Immediate peer-to-peer connection, activating participants’ context and interest.

2. Research Foundations: Why Sentence Writing Matters (15 minutes)
• Content: Present key research on sentence-level writing: its role in decoding, fluency, syntax, and comprehension. Connect to current literacy research and the learning sciences.
• Engagement:
o Interactive slide annotation or digital padlet: Participants highlight words/phrases in sample research findings that resonate with their practice.
o Mini-quiz/game (Mentimeter): Bust common myths about sentence writing.
• Process: Frequent device-based check-ins to keep energy high; data visualizations spark discussion.

3. Instructional Routines for Sentence Writing (25 minutes)
• Content: Model 4 evidence-based routines (oral rehearsal, sentence combining, mentor sentences, interactive writing).
• Engagement:
o Live modeling and guided practice: Participants try routines in pairs or triads, acting as “teacher” and “students.”
o Discussion: How could these routines adapt across grades K–5 and for multilingual learners or students with disabilities?
• Process: Alternating modeling, peer-to-peer practice, and reflection ensure participants internalize routines.

4. Assessment: Monitoring and Elevating Sentence Skills (15 minutes)
• Content: Share quick, standardized assessments that measure sentence writing and related language skills. Demonstrate how results inform instruction.
• Engagement:
o Hands-on scoring: Participants analyze anonymized student work samples and practice applying a simple rubric.
o Device-based reflection: Submit one way they could use assessment data in their classroom or school.
• Process: Application to real student work creates authenticity; structured rubric use builds confidence.

5. Application & Action Planning (15 minutes)
• Content: Connect learning to participants’ own contexts. Summarize key takeaways and next steps.
• Engagement:
o Small-group discussion: Draft a plan to embed one new sentence-writing routine and one assessment strategy into daily literacy instruction.
o Gallery walk or digital share-out: Groups post their plans; participants circulate or review online submissions.
• Process: Peer-to-peer collaboration plus visible commitment to action ensures transfer of learning.

6. Closing & Reflection (10 minutes)
• Content: Reinforce importance of sentence writing for literacy achievement and equity.
• Engagement:
o Exit Ticket: “What’s one sentence-writing strategy you will try next week?”
o Final reflection: How strong sentences strengthen both reading and writing.
• Process: Reflection loop elevates metacognition; participants leave with concrete, ready-to-implement next steps.

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Outcomes

After this session, participants will be able to…

Explain how sentence writing develops alongside reading and why it is critical for literacy success, including its impact on decoding, fluency, syntax, and comprehension.

Apply evidence-based instructional routines (e.g., oral rehearsal, sentence combining, mentor sentences) that integrate sentence writing into daily literacy instruction across grade levels, including differentiation for multilingual learners and students with learning differences.

Use and interpret brief, standardized assessments of sentence writing and related language skills to monitor student growth, provide targeted feedback, and adjust instruction in real time.

Create an action plan for embedding one sentence-writing routine and one assessment strategy into their classroom practice to accelerate student growth in both reading and writing.

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Supporting research

This presentation draws on peer-reviewed research and scholarly books that represent the most current evidence on literacy, with particular emphasis on sentence construction as a critical component of reading and writing development. The following are just some of the works that provide the foundational evidence and expert perspectives that inform this session’s content and practices:

Abbott, R. D., Berninger, V. W., & Fayol, M. (2010). Longitudinal relationships of levels of language in writing and between writing and reading in grades 1 to 7. Journal of Educational Psychology, 102(2), 281–298. https://doi.org/10.1037/a001931

Beaufort, A., (2008). Writing in the professions. In C. Bazerman (Ed.) Handbook of research on
writing (pp. 221-235). Erlbaum. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781410616470

Berninger, V. W., Nagy, W., & Beers, S. (2011). Child writers’ construction and reconstruction
of single sentences and construction of multi-sentence texts: Contributions of syntax
and transcription to translation. Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 24,
151–182. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11145-010-9262-y

Berninger, V., Yates, C., Cartwright, A., Rutberg, J., Remy, E., & Abbott, R. (1992). Lower-level developmental skills in beginning writing. Reading and Writing, 4(3), 257-280.
https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01027151

Datchuk, S. M. (2017). A direct instruction and precision teaching intervention to improve the
sentence construction of middle school students with writing difficulties. Journal of
Special Education, 51(2), 62–71. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022466916665588

Datchuk, S. M., Young, M. K., Allen, A. A., & Zimmermann, L. M. (2024). How to use instructional assessments for explicit instruction of text-writing fluency. Intervention in School and Clinic, 60, 220-227. https://doi.org/10.1177/10534512241302712

Datchuk, S. M., *Zimmermann, L. M., Wagner, K., & Poch, A. L. (2024). Five steps to teach simple sentence writing to students with learning disabilities. Teaching Exceptional Children, 56, 346-355. https://doi.org/10.1177/00400599221120063

Harris, K. R., Graham, S., Mason, L. H., & Friedlander, B. (2008). Powerful writing strategies for
all students. Brookes.

Hier, B. O., Eckert, T. L., & Datchuk, S. M. (2023). The development of advanced planning among emerging writers. Reading and Writing, 36, 77-96. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11145-022-10281-7

Young, M. K., Gillespie-Rouse, A., & Datchuk, S. M. (2022). Writing interventions for students with learning disabilities: A scoping review. Learning Disabilities: A Contemporary Journal, 20(2), 129-148.

Panos, K., & Datchuk, S. M. (2021). Constructing simple sentences: A writing fluency intervention for middle school students with disabilities. Remedial and Special Education, 42(2), 107-117. https://doi.org/10.1177/0741932519876694

Datchuk, S. M., Poch, A. L., & *Panos, K. (2020). Improving the sentence writing fluency of a student with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and speech/language disorder: A pilot study. Insights into Learning Disabilities, 17(2), 163-178.

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Presenters

Photo
Professor
University of Iowa
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Professional Learning Director
Learning Without Tears

Session specifications

Topic:

Instructional Design and Strategies, Science of Reading

Grade level:

PK-2

Audience:

District-Level Leadership, School Level Leadership, Teacher

Attendee devices:

Devices useful

Attendee device specification:

Smartphone: Windows, Android, iOS

Participant accounts, software and other materials:

As noted in our outline, we are considering using Mentimeter to engage participants in the session. It only requires a smart phone. We will have a QR code and/or a URL and code for participants to easily access and participate.

Subject area:

Language Arts, Multi-Language Learners

ISTE Standards:

For Educators: Learner, Leader
For Students: Empowered Learner

Transformational Learning Principles:

Develop Expertise, Elevate Reflection

Influencer Disclosure:

This session includes a presenter that indicated a “material connection” to a brand that includes a personal, family or employment relationship, or a financial relationship. See individual speaker menu for disclosure information.