Reading-Writing Connection: Integrated Literacy Instruction in K-3

Research on early literacy consistently shows that reading and writing reinforce one another.

Abstract

This synthesis examined 20 meta-analyses and systematic reviews to understand the reciprocal relationship between reading and writing for students in kindergarten through third grade. Reading and writing develop interdependently through shared foundational skills including phonological awareness, orthographic knowledge, and the alphabetic principle. Writing instruction, particularly transcription skills such as handwriting and spelling, improved reading outcomes for struggling students, with spelling instruction producing significant effects on word reading (BC-SMD=1.52 in individualized settings). Reading instruction improved writing outcomes (ES=0.57), with phonological awareness and phonemic segmentation instruction transferring strongly to writing. Balanced literacy approaches produced reading outcomes equivalent to reading-only programs while additionally improving writing. The most effective interventions included Self-Regulated Strategy Development (ES=0.67-1.89), technology-based handwriting (ES=0.85), and individualized spelling instruction for students with learning disabilities. Explicit, systematic instruction proved essential across all domains. Struggling students and students with disabilities required more intensive instruction with greater total hours, smaller groups, and explicit connections between reading and writing. The synthesis provides evidence-based guidance for integrating reading and writing instruction in K-3 classrooms to improve literacy outcomes for all students.

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evidence snapshots

Children become stronger readers when they also write regularly—and vice versa.

EPPs should treat reading and writing as interconnected domains in all literacy coursework.

Effective K-3 literacy instruction should explicitly link reading and writing skills.

Connecting reading and writing—rather than alternating between them—leads to better outcomes.

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