FIELD REPORT · A TEACHER WHO TAUGHT IN BOTH CLASSROOMS

25 Organized Paragraphs in Seoul. 4 Blank Pages in Seattle.

Same prompt. Same age. Same intelligence. She gave the identical writing exercise to students in two countries. The gap between the results wasn't subtle — it was years wide. After a decade in the classroom, she can finally explain why.

Story by Emily Hartman

3rd Grade Teacher · Seoul 2018–2021 · Seattle 2021–present

THE PROMPT

One Exercise. Two Countries. A Gap That Changed Everything.

I've given this writing prompt hundreds of times across two countries, two school systems, and eight years of teaching.

It's the simplest exercise you can give a 3rd grader. No trick. No complexity. Just: tell me about your weekend.

THE PROMPT — GIVEN TO BOTH CLASSROOMS

"Write a paragraph about your favorite thing to do on the weekend."

I gave this prompt to my Seoul students for three years running. Every time, the result was the same: 25 children picked up their pencils and started writing. Within ten minutes, I had 25 organized paragraphs on my desk. Clear handwriting. Complete sentences. A beginning, a middle, and an end.

 

In English. Their second language.

 

When I came home to Seattle and gave the same prompt to my new class — same age, same intelligence, same curiosity — the result was so different that I almost couldn't process it.

I sat at my desk that evening and stared at the stack of papers. I wasn't angry. I wasn't disappointed in the children — they were wonderful. Smart, creative, enthusiastic. But their writing skills were years behind what I'd become accustomed to seeing.

 

And I knew exactly why. Because I'd spent three years watching the other system work.

Chapter ONE

What 8:15 AM Looked Like in Seoul

My first morning at Haneul Elementary in Seoul's Gangnam district, I arrived early and walked through the hallways. In almost every classroom, children were already at their desks — at 8:15 AM, fifteen minutes before the official start of school — doing writing practice.

 

Not homework. Not assignments. Practice.

 

Rows of children, pencils in hand, working through structured exercises in writing workbooks. The youngest ones were tracing Korean characters and English letters with intense concentration. The older ones were copying vocabulary words, constructing sentences, writing short paragraphs from guided prompts.

 

It was quiet. Focused. Routine. Nobody was being told to do it. Nobody was being rewarded for doing it. It was just what you did in the morning. Like stretching before exercise.

 

I asked my co-teacher, Ms. Park, about it. She looked confused by the question.

"Of course they practice writing every morning. How else would they learn to write?"

— Ms. Park, Korean elementary teacher, Haneul Elementary

How else would they learn to write.

 

In my American training, the answer was: they read. They absorb. They're given prompts and they figure it out. In Seoul, the answer was practice. Daily, structured, relentless practice. And over the next three years, I watched what that practice actually built.

Chapter TWO

The Method Behind the 25 Paragraphs

The Korean approach to writing wasn't just "more practice." It was a completely different philosophy — one that explained every gap I would later see in my Seattle classroom.

✋ Writing was treated as a physical skill first

Before any child was asked to express an idea, they spent months practicing letter formation. Tracing. Copying. Repeating. The goal wasn't expression — it was motor automaticity. They wanted the hand to know what to do before the brain was asked to think about what to say.

🔁 Repetition was the entire method

A child who could write a word correctly 7 out of 10 times kept practicing until it was 10 out of 10. Then they moved on. In my American training, we called this 'drill and kill.' In Seoul, they called it 'building the foundation.'

📐 The progression was rigid and intentional

Letters first. Always. Then words. Then phrases. Then sentences. Then paragraphs. A child who struggled with sentences was sent back to word building. The teachers understood: the higher skill can't develop until the lower skill is solid. Nothing was skipped.

🏠 Home practice was non-negotiable

Every child had a writing workbook for home. Every evening, 15–20 minutes. Parents didn't question it any more than brushing teeth. The school provided instruction. The home provided practice. Both were essential.

📖 Writing and reading were taught separately

In the US, we assume reading transfers to writing. In Seoul, they were treated as independent skills requiring separate practice. Children practiced both every day. That's why Korean students could write five-paragraph essays in English — a language they learned to read and write as distinct, practiced skills.

Chapter THREE

The 5,000-Hour Explanation

When I came home to Seattle and saw those results on my desk, I wasn't confused. I was heartbroken. Because I knew the math.

My Seoul students had been practicing writing every day — structured, progressive, repetition-based — since they were four years old. By 3rd grade, they'd accumulated thousands of hours of dedicated practice.

 

My Seattle students had been assigned writing occasionally. Maybe once or twice a week. Unstructured. No daily practice. No progressive system.

 

They'd been expected to develop writing proficiency through osmosis — by reading, by listening, by doing a worksheet here and there.

 

The gap wasn't a talent gap. It was a practice gap. And once you see it that way, everything changes — because a practice gap has a practice solution.

THE DETAIL THAT STILL STOPS ME

My Korean 3rd graders could write five-paragraph essays with a clear thesis, supporting evidence, and a conclusion — in English, their second language. My American 3rd graders, writing in their first and only language, couldn't produce a paragraph.

The Korean children weren't smarter. They weren't more disciplined. They'd simply been given 5,000 more hours of structured practice. That's not a talent story. It's a method story.

Chapter four

Five Things I Brought Home From Seoul

After that first week in Seattle, I made a list of the things I'd learned in Korea that I believed could transform how American children learn to write. I share them at every parent-teacher conference.

1 - Writing must be practiced daily — not weekly

Fifteen minutes a day is worth more than two hours on Saturday. The brain builds writing pathways through consistent daily repetition. Sporadic practice doesn't create automaticity.

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2 - Start with the physical skill before the cognitive skill

Letter formation and handwriting must be automatic before a child is asked to compose. If the hand is still struggling with how to form letters, the brain can't think about what to write. Build the motor skill first.

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3 - Follow a strict progression — and don't skip levels

Letter formation and handwriting must be automatic before a child is asked to compose. If the hand is still struggling with how to form letters, the brain can't think about what to write. Build the motor skill first.

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4 - Repetition is not boring — it's building

American education culture sometimes treats repetition as the enemy of creativity. In Seoul, I watched repetition create the foundation that made creativity possible. You can't express creative ideas in writing if you can't write a sentence. Master the mechanics first. Expression follows.

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5 - Home practice is not optional — it's essential

Schools alone cannot provide enough daily writing practice. The math simply doesn't work. Home practice — structured, consistent, daily — is what closes the gap between what school can provide and what children need.

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Chapter FIVE

What I Know to Be True

American children are not less capable than Korean children. They're not less intelligent. They're not less creative. In many ways, American education produces more independent thinkers, more confident speakers, and more original problem-solvers. Those are real strengths.

 

But when it comes to writing — the specific, trainable, practice-dependent skill of putting thoughts on paper in an organized way — we have a gap. Not because our children can't do it. Because we haven't given them the practice.

 

That gap is closable. It doesn't require moving to Korea. It doesn't require a different school or a private tutor. It requires 15 minutes a day of the kind of practice that Ms. Park at Haneul Elementary would have called obvious.

"I watched it work for three years in Seoul. I'm watching it work now for the families in my Seattle classroom who've adopted it. The method isn't new. It's just a daily habit that any family can start today."

— Emily Hartman, 3rd Grade Teacher, Seattle

THE SYSTEM I NOW RECOMMEND TO EVERY PARENT

The LeXue Complete Writing System

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15 minutes a day — the same daily commitment I saw in Seoul

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LeXue Culture Research Team

Education Research · Published by Sichuan Fine Arts Publishing House

LeXue creates bilingual writing workbooks for children ages 3–14. Published by Sichuan Fine Arts Publishing House. Trusted by 2,800+ families. Free shipping over $35 · 30-day money-back guarantee · 12,000+ printable bonus pages.