Live Webinar | Evidence-based Tier 1 Instructional Writing Practices
Includes a Live Web Event on 08/19/2026 at 4:00 PM (EDT)
-
Register
- Non-member - $29
- Professional Basic - Free!
- Professional Full - Free!
- Professional Premiere - Free!
- Early Career Basic - Free!
- Early Career Full - Free!
- Early Career Premiere - Free!
- Graduate Student Basic - Free!
- Graduate Student Full - Free!
- Graduate Student Premiere - Free!
- PreService Student Teacher Basic - Free!
- PreService Student Basic - Free!
- PreService Student Full - Free!
- PreService Student Premiere Premiere - Free!
- Paraeducator Basic - Free!
- Paraeducator Full - Free!
- Paraeducator Premiere - Free!
- Retired Basic - Free!
- Retired Full - Free!
- Retired Premiere - Free!
- Affiliate Basic - Free!
- Affiliate Full - Free!
- Affiliate Premiere - Free!
This presentation draws on over 1000 intervention studies examining practices for teaching writing to students in grades 1 to 12. It presents five basic principles that should guide writing instruction for students with and without special educational needs. This includes: Students must write; We Need to Support them as they write; We need to teach critical writing skills, strategies, and knowledge; We need to connect writing, reading, and learning so they support each other; and We need create writing environments in which students can grow and enjoy writing.
Presented by: Steve Graham

Steve Graham
Regent
Steve Graham is a Regents and the Warner Professor in the Division of Leadership and Innovation in Teachers College. For 47 years he has studied how writing develops, how to teach it effectively, and how writing can be used to support reading and learning. His research involves typically developing writers and students with special needs in both elementary and secondary schools, with much of occurring in classrooms in urban schools. Graham is the former editor of Exceptional Children, Contemporary Educational Psychology, Journal of Writing Research, Focus on Exceptional Children, and Journal of Educational Psychology. He is the co-author of the "Handbook of Writing Research," "Handbook of Learning Disabilities," "APA Handbook of Educational Psychology," "Writing Better," "Powerful Writing Strategies for all Students" and "Making the Writing Process Work." He is also the author of three influential Carnegie Corporation reports: Writing Next , Writing to Read , and Informing Writing.