We learn to write by reading, but writing can make you smarter We learn to write by reading, but writing can make you smarter

My goal in this paper is to make two points:
 1. Writing style does not come from writing or from direct
 instruction, but from reading.
 2. Actual writing can help us solve problems and can make us
 smarter.
 Writing Style Comes from Reading
 A substa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stephen Krashen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2008-04-01
Series:Ilha do Desterro
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/7444
Description
Summary:My goal in this paper is to make two points:
 1. Writing style does not come from writing or from direct
 instruction, but from reading.
 2. Actual writing can help us solve problems and can make us
 smarter.
 Writing Style Comes from Reading
 A substantial amount of research slrongly suggests that wc learn to write by reading. To be more precise, wc acquire writing style, the special language of writing, by reading.
 Hypothesizing that writing style comes from reading, not from
 writing or instruction, is consistent with what is known about language acquisition: Most of language acquisition takes place subconsciously, not through deliberate study, and it is a result of input (comprehension), not output (production) (Krashen, 1982). Thus, if you wrile a page a day, your writing style or your command of mechanics will not improve. On Ihe other hand, other good things may result from your writing, as we shall see in the second section of this paper. My goal in this paper is to make two points:
 1. Writing style does not come from writing or from direct
 instruction, but from reading.
 2. Actual writing can help us solve problems and can make us
 smarter.
 Writing Style Comes from Reading
 A substantial amount of research slrongly suggests that wc learn to write by reading. To be more precise, wc acquire writing style, the special language of writing, by reading.
 Hypothesizing that writing style comes from reading, not from
 writing or instruction, is consistent with what is known about language acquisition: Most of language acquisition takes place subconsciously, not through deliberate study, and it is a result of input (comprehension), not output (production) (Krashen, 1982). Thus, if you wrile a page a day, your writing style or your command of mechanics will not improve. On Ihe other hand, other good things may result from your writing, as we shall see in the second section of this paper.
ISSN:0101-4846
2175-8026