THE WRITING METHOD · OBSERVED IN SEOUL · BACKED BY RESEARCH

Letters First. Then Words. Then Sentences. Then Paragraphs. 
The Progression American Schools Skipped.

There is a specific sequence for teaching writing that the highest-performing education systems in the world follow religiously — and that American schools abandoned. A teacher who worked in both systems explains how it works, why it matters, and how any family can follow it at home in 15 minutes a day.

Story by Emily Hartman

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

CHAPTER ONE

The Sequence American Schools Abandoned

In 2010, the United States removed cursive from Common Core standards. Shortly after, dedicated handwriting instruction followed in most districts. Structured daily writing practice — the kind where a teacher models letter formation stroke by stroke and children practice until the skill is automatic — was replaced by phonics apps, reading programs, and occasional writing prompts.

 

The progression was skipped. Not just one step — almost all of them.

 

Today, the average American preschooler gets approximately two minutes of writing practice per day. By the time they reach 3rd grade, most children have never been systematically taught to form letters, build words, construct sentences, or organize paragraphs in a progressive sequence.

 

Instead, they're handed a prompt — "Write about your favorite thing to do on the weekend" — and expected to produce something. With no foundation built underneath.

"American schools don't teach writing. They assign it. I didn't understand what that meant until I spent three years in a system that actually teaches it."

— Emily Hartman, after returning to Seattle from Seoul

Chapter two

What the Full Progression Actually Looks Like

I spent three years teaching ESL at Haneul Elementary in Seoul's Gangnam district. From my first morning — when I walked the halls at 8:15 AM and saw every classroom already full of children doing structured writing practice — I watched a system that treats writing as a physical skill built through progressive mastery.

 

Here are the five principles I observed every day for three years:

In American training, they called repetition "drill and kill." In Seoul, they called it "building the foundation."

Chapter three

Two Systems. Side by Side.

After three years in Seoul and five years in Seattle, I can map the differences between the two systems precisely. The gap isn't about talent, funding, or culture. It's about method.

Chapter four

What the Progression Produces When You Follow It

By 3rd grade, my Korean students could write five-paragraph essays with a clear thesis, supporting evidence, and a conclusion. In English — their second language. Their handwriting was consistent. Their grammar was internalized. When I gave a writing prompt, every child started writing within seconds.

 

When I gave the same prompt to my Seattle students — same age, same intelligence — 4 out of 25 produced nothing. Most couldn't write a coherent paragraph.

 

The Korean children weren't smarter. They'd followed the progression. The American children hadn't — because no one had taught it to them.

The gap isn't a talent gap. It's a method gap — specifically, a progression gap. One system builds every step in sequence. The other skips to the top and wonders why children struggle.

Chapter five

Why the Progression Works — What the Science Says

My observations in Seoul are now backed by a converging body of peer-reviewed research:

The research confirms what I watched for three years in Seoul: the progression works because it builds the neurological foundation first. Letters before words. Words before sentences. The hand before the brain. Practice before performance.

CHAPTER SIX

How to Follow the Progression at Home

You don't need to move to Seoul. You don't need a private tutor. You don't need to overhaul your child's routine.

You need 15 minutes a day and a system that follows the progression.

 

Not random worksheets from Pinterest — those have no developmental sequence. Not a tracing app on a tablet — the Elsevier study showed screens don't produce the same neurological benefit. Not journaling or "creative writing" — that's level 5 before levels 1 through 4 have been built.

 

You need a structured, progressive, repetition-based system that starts with letter formation and builds through words, sentences, paragraphs, and essays — in that order, without skipping.

 

The same method I watched produce exceptional writers in Seoul. The same method the research now confirms. Every evening. Pencil on paper. 15 minutes.

"The progression isn't complicated. It's just never been offered to American families in a complete, structured system — until now."

— Emily Hartman, after returning to Seattle from Seoul

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.