When doing an initial writing assessment in first grade, I noticed that a few students completely stopped writing after coming to a word they did not know how to spell. I had read Pete the Cat: I Love My White Shoes by Eric Litwin to teach the strategy of using pictures to improve accuracy earlier that morning, and wondered if a catchphrase in the book could help me get students over this hump.
I gathered the students together and told them I wanted to show them what to do if they came to a word they couldn't spell. I proceeded to model writing a story about how happy I was to be with them in first grade, and then came to a word I wasn't sure about. I said, "Oh no! I don't know how to spell excited. Will I cry?"
Without missing a beat, the students chimed in, "Goodness no!"
I responded, "Write the sounds I know, underline, and go. Say it with me: Write the sounds I know, underline, and go."
Then I modeled writing the sounds I could hear, underlined them, and continued with the sentence.
After writing a few more words, I got stuck again. "Oh no! I don't know how to spell principal. Will I cry?"
They responded, "Goodness no! Write the sounds you know, underline, and go."
During writing workshop, not a single student froze when coming to a word they didn't know. Many could be heard reciting, "Write the sounds I know, underline, and go."
Thanks, Pete.