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Notes on the Gattegno Learning Materials
and their Application to the Teaching of
Writing - William Bernhardt
I have been using the Gattegno learning materials in my own teaching since 1971, after I first
encountered them in a workshop in Spanish taught by one of Dr. Gattegno's colleagues.
Because they made a powerful impact on me in a field where I was a struggling learner and
had repeatedly met with failure, I felt they might also be helpful to my students. Certainly my
experience as a teacher and a learner has been profoundly affected by Gattegno's work from
that time to the present. However, I doubt that I can convey what I have gained from this long
apprenticeship in the following pages. If they have the effect of stimulating the reader's
curiosity to find out more for himself or herself then I will have succeeded. Dr. Caleb
Gattegno developed many learning materials during his long and varied career, not all of
which are easily available today. I am referring here only to the following:
▪ Color-coded Phonic Code Charts ("Fidels") for working on the sounds and spellings of
English and other languages.
▪ Color-coded Word Charts for literacy in native languages ("Words in Color - Word Wall
Charts").
▪ Color-coded Word Charts of functional vocabulary in second/foreign languages ("The
Silent Way - Word Charts").
▪ Wooden rods ("Algebricks", "Cuisenaire rods") for illustrating grammatical structures and
spatial/temporal relations, evoking imagery, etc.
▪ Wall Pictures for triggering description, narrative, etc.
(All of the above, as well as instructional materials for teachers describing their use, can be
purchased from Educational Solutions Inc. in New York and its representatives in a number
of other countries throughout the world. Practical, hands-on workshops--which I consider
essential and indispensable--are also available through Educational Solutions.)
I have used all of the materials listed above in various situations: teaching remedial and
regular composition courses on the college level; tutoring learners of all ages from
kindergarten to graduate school; conducting teacher-training courses, seminars and workshops
in the U.S., China, and Japan. I have always found them to be extremely powerful in eliciting
writing from learners of all ages and conditions, as well as in prompting people to reflect on
their own experience as writers. I have also found them to be compatible with whatever other
materials -- textbooks, novels, magazines, films, worksheets, etc. -- I provided myself or were
required to use. (I have found them to be particularly compatible with the various "writing
process" approaches advanced by people such as Elbow, Calkins, Graves, Moffett, et. al. as
well as Freire's concern with "empowering" learners.)
Gattegno's materials are fundamentally different from virtually all other commercially
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available learning/teaching aids in at least four respects:
▪ they have absolutely no entertainment content or component;
▪ they are multivalent and can be used with learners of all ages and degrees of competence,
and in any number of diverse ways that are not immediately obvious;
▪ the concepts and language (some might say jargon) used be Gattegno to present his
materials and their use is unfamiliar and difficult;
▪ the only way to understand what they offer is to experience them directly for oneself, and
not as a one-shot deal but repeatedly.
These characteristics may in part account for the resistance of many teachers and educational
administrators to the Gattegno materials. In any case, I haven't found much resistance among
my own students.
The longer I work with the materials, the more possibilities I see for their application. Indeed,
the possibilities inherent in the rods, charts and pictures seem infinite. Virtually every
conceivable real-life situation can be quickly and easily illustrated by the rods and used to
trigger descriptive, narrative, and dramatic writing. The word charts provide the essential
vocabulary for every conceivable type of writing (lyric poetry, philosophic prose,
comparison/contrast, cause and effect, describing a process, etc.). If my students ask me how
to spell a word, the meaning of a certain prefix, etc., I can throw them back on their own
resources by pointing to certain items on certain charts.
Perhaps if I were a different kind of person, I would have been able to develop my use of
these materials completely on my own. Instead, I have found it necessary to take a lot of
workshops at Educational Solutions, read widely in Dr. Gattegno's books, and observe other
"Silent Way" and "Words in Color" teachers. All of these cost something, both in terms of
time and money. Still, when I compare this investment to what I paid over the years for
graduate school courses, educational conferences, pedagogical journals, teachers' manuals,
etc., the cost seems minimal and the return extraordinarily high.
There are several areas in which I have found the Gattegno materials especially powerful:
1. Providing learners with a valid basis for confidence in their own
ability to find 'something to say'
Clever' assignments may elicit unexpected quantity or quality of writing from students, but
often with the result that the writer ascribes his success to the teacher rather than
himself/herself. However, if I say "write a paragraph using all of the words on Chart 6 plus
any other words you wish", and each learner in the group makes his/her own unique response
to the challenge, the distinction between the role of the "trigger" (the words on the chart) and
the abilities of the learner becomes visible to everyone. The students see that they are the ones
doing the writing, not the teacher--a critical awareness.
The rods can be configured in unlimited numbers of ways to mobilize the imagery, creativity,
and intuition of the learners in response to the question "what do you see?" Thus the learners
can discover the importance of perception in becoming a writer. A similar use can be made of
the wall pictures, which, through their deliberate ambiguity, permit writers to focus on those
attributes they wish to stress and ignore others.
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2. Using highly restricted writing situations to dissolve inhibitions and
free the learners to focus on the demands of expression
Imposing restriction on which words can be used (as when a certain selection is made from
the charts) often has the result of making learners feel more rather than less "free". Because
the restrictions are purely arbitrary and formal, they are not perceived by the students as a
manipulation. Furthermore, the learners generally discover that words trigger other words so
that "keeping going" is a matter of letting oneself go rather than straining.
Sets of words can be chosen by the instructor (or the learners) as starting places for writing
according to any number of criteria including eliciting particular inner states of feeling,
evoking certain subject matters or topics, focusing on particular parts of speech or
grammatical constructions, etc., etc.
3. Providing opportunities for increased facility and coherence in a
wide variety of written convention
All of the materials provide triggers for narrative: a street scene can be suggested by an
arrangement of rods, or a story dynamically portrayed by simulating movement; a word on a
chart can be proposed as the starting place for a recollection; what happened prior to the scene
illustrated in a wall picture can be reconstructed...
Opportunities for precise description/directions can be easily created by placing a few rods on
top of one another on a desk; ever more challenging situations can be devised by the addition
of more rods or through establishing more complex spatial/temporal relationships. Modes of
composition (comparison, cause/effect, etc.) can be elicited through the use of the rods,
pictures, or the identification of relevant vocabulary on the appropriate chart.
4. Mobilizing the powers of the learners' spoken language as a support
for correctness in standard written English
The technique of "visual dictation", using a pointer and words on the charts, helps learners to
understand the complexity of the encoding process, which includes using the melody and
rhythm of the language to hold the words of an utterance in mind.
Using groups of often confused or misused words chosen from the charts (such as "to", "too",
and "two" or "where" and "were") within the same sentence can help learners become aware
of differences between the demands of speaking and writing.
The Phonic Code Charts ("Fidel") can be used to clarify the sounds and syllables (often at the
ends of words) critical to the grammar of the language.
5. Helping students master the written code of English (spelling)
Both the Phonic Code and Word Charts can be used to clarify the mysteries of English
spelling, allowing the learners to perceive both the visual and aural dimensions of the
challenge. (Detailed suggestions are provided in The Common Sense of Teaching Reading
and Writing.) The rods, charts and pictures all lend themselves to group activities and
collaborative learning. When students work together on composing, revising, and proof-
reading in response to a certain assignment triggered by, say, a selection of words from a
particular chart, they all have access to the same sources of information and can form criteria
for truth, rightness, and correctness based on their own perceptions, rather than the teacher's
authority.