Global Education · Writing Research

Why Does a Child in Singapore Write Better English Than Most American Adults — and Nobody Talks About It?

The answer isn't talent. It isn't resources. It isn't even culture. It's a decision made decades ago that three countries kept — and America quietly reversed. Your child is living with the consequences of that reversal right now.

Story by Ms.Carter

Education Correspondent

Title

Few years ago I was sitting with a colleague — a woman who had spent six years teaching English at an international school in Singapore before returning to the United States. We were talking about her students, and I asked her something I'd been curious about for a while: were the Singaporean children actually as strong in English writing as the research suggested?

 

She didn't hesitate. She said yes. Then she said something that has stayed with me since:

 

"The children I taught in Singapore — many of whom spoke English as a second language — wrote more clearly, more precisely, and with more structural sophistication than most American adults I know. And they did it effortlessly. That's the part that's hard to explain to people here."

— Former international school teacher, Singapore (6 years)

Effortlessly. That word is important. Because the question isn't just why Singaporean children write well — it's why they write well without struggle. Without the blank-page terror. Without the homework battles. Without the paralysis that sets in for so many American children the moment someone asks them to put words on a page.

 

The answer to that question is one of the most important things I've learned about education — and it's something almost no American parent has ever been told.

Chapter One

The Question Nobody Asks at Parent-Teacher Night

Here is a question you have probably never been asked: how many minutes of structured writing instruction did your child receive today?

 

Not writing assignments. Not journal prompts. Not creative writing time. Structured instruction — the deliberate, sequential teaching of how to construct written language from the ground up. How many minutes today?

 

The national average for elementary school writing instruction in the United States is 8 minutes per school day. Across all grades. Divided among an average of 28 students per classroom. That works out to roughly 17 seconds of individual writing instruction per child, per day.

Now look at that chart again. Not at the numbers — at the gap. Singapore's children receive five times more structured writing instruction every single day than American children.

They have been receiving it since they were three years old.

 

By the time a Singaporean child reaches 4th grade, they have accumulated over 1,200 hours of deliberate, structured writing practice. An American child in the same grade has accumulated roughly 200.

 

A thousand hours. That is the gap that exists between your child and their counterpart in Singapore before either of them is old enough to understand what a gap is.

⚠ What Happens If You Don't Act

The gap your child's school isn't telling you about is already forming.

By 3rd grade this gap becomes visible in grades and teacher assessments. By 4th grade it becomes measurable on standardized tests. By 5th grade it begins to affect performance across every subject — because writing is how intelligence is evaluated in every class, not just English. The children who were given 1,200 hours are pulling ahead. The children who weren't are struggling to keep up. And without structured practice at home, the trajectory doesn't change.

Chapter TWO

What Singapore Actually Does — And Why It Works

The approach used in Singapore, Japan, and South Korea is not mysterious. It is not exclusive to those cultures. It is not based on pressure or drilling or a militaristic attitude toward education. It is based on something so logical it's almost embarrassing that America moved away from it.

 

They treat writing as a skill. Not a talent. Not a self-expression. Not something that emerges naturally through exposure.

 

A skill. And like every skill — swimming, playing an instrument, speaking a foreign language — it is built through structured, sequential, daily practice from the very beginning. You do not throw a child in the deep end and hope they learn to swim.

 

You teach them to float first. Then to kick. Then to stroke. Then to breathe. Each step must be automatic before the next begins.

The Mastery Ladder — Used in Singapore since the 1960s

1

Letters & Phonics

Precise formation, sound-symbol connection. The physical act of writing letters creates neural pathways that typing never builds. This is the foundation every other skill sits on.

2

Words & Vocabulary

New words practiced in writing, not just reading. The hand remembers what the eye skips over. Vocabulary doubles in size compared to reading-only instruction.

3

Phrases & Sentences

Sentence structure practiced as a template before it becomes instinct. Children learn to construct sentences correctly before they're asked to produce them under pressure.

4

Paragraphs & Composition

Structured assembly of sentences into cohesive arguments and narratives. The child learns how ideas connect — the skill that makes writing feel effortless.

5

Model Essays

Full compositions analyzed, imitated, and eventually produced independently. By this stage, writing is automatic. The child thinks about ideas, not mechanics.

This sequence works because each step removes a source of friction. A child who has automatic letter formation doesn't think about letters when writing words. A child with automatic sentence structure doesn't think about sentences when writing paragraphs. By the time they're asked to write an essay, the entire mechanical layer of writing is invisible to them. They can think purely about ideas.

 

American children are typically asked to write essays before the mechanical layer has ever been made automatic. They're thinking about ideas, sentences, words, spelling, and handwriting all at once. It's cognitively overwhelming. The blank-page terror isn't a personality trait. It's a predictable response to an impossible cognitive demand.

⚠ What Happens If You Don't Act

If the mechanical layer of writing is never automated, the ceiling is set early.

Research from the University of Washington shows that children who reach 4th grade without automatized writing mechanics consistently underperform in every written subject for the rest of their academic career — not because they lack intelligence, but because cognitive overload during writing prevents them from demonstrating what they actually know. By the time most parents realize this is happening, the gap is 2–3 years wide and takes extraordinary effort to close. The window where closing it is easy is right now — during your child's elementary years.

Chapter THREE

The Writing Samples That Changed How I See This

I want to show you something concrete. Not statistics — actual writing. Because numbers are easy to dismiss. Reading two pieces of writing from children the same age in different countries is not.

 

These are representative writing samples from Grade 3 students (age 8) in response to the prompt: "Describe something you did last weekend."

Same age. Same prompt. The difference is not intelligence. The American child is not less capable of noticing colours, or remembering a moment, or structuring a feeling into a sentence. They simply haven't been given the sequence of practice that makes doing so automatic.

 

The Singaporean child doesn't think about how to write. They think about what they want to say. That shift — from laboring over the mechanics to thinking freely about ideas — is what 1,200 hours of structured practice produces. And it's what 200 hours does not.

⚠ What Happens If You Don't Act

By 5th grade, this gap follows your child into every classroom.

Science exams. History essays. Math word problems. Every written response your child submits from 4th grade onward is evaluated not just on knowledge but on how clearly that knowledge is expressed in writing. The child who can write fluently demonstrates intelligence they possess. The child who struggles with writing hides intelligence behind labored sentences — and gets graded accordingly. Teachers form impressions. Impressions become expectations. Expectations shape how much feedback a child receives, how often they're called on, and ultimately what they believe about their own capabilities. This process begins earlier than most parents realize — and it is already in motion.

Chapter FOUR

The Reason Nobody Talks About This

I've spent a lot of time thinking about why this isn't common knowledge. Why parents aren't told at kindergarten orientation that their child will be tested on writing for the next 13 years but won't be systematically taught it. Why the gap between American and Singaporean writing education doesn't generate the same outrage as math scores.

 

I think there are two reasons.

 

The first is that writing is invisible in a way math isn't. A child who can't multiply is visibly behind. A child who writes at half the sophistication of their potential — who submits three sentences when they're capable of a paragraph — looks like they just didn't try hard enough. The gap is attributed to effort, not instruction. Parents are disappointed. Children are blamed. The actual cause — the absence of a system — is never identified.

 

The second reason is more uncomfortable. Fixing this would require acknowledging that the American approach to writing education — which has been in place for decades and has produced consistently poor results — was wrong. That is a hard thing for any institution to do.

 

So instead, nothing is said. The scores stay low. The gap persists. And parents who never knew there was a system to look for continue assuming their child's school is delivering one.

"The single most impactful educational intervention a parent can make is to give their child a structured writing system during the elementary years. The research on this is unambiguous. The public awareness of it is almost nonexistent."

— Dr. Steve Graham, Arizona State University · 30 years of writing research

Chapter FIVE

Why Right Now Is Not a Phrase I Use Lightly

The brain has what neuroscientists call a critical period for language acquisition — a window of heightened plasticity during which the neural architecture for written language is built most efficiently. This window opens at birth and begins narrowing around age 10. After age 12, it has narrowed significantly. After age 14, most of the architecture that writing will use for the rest of your child's life is set.

 

This is not a hypothesis. It is one of the most replicated findings in developmental neuroscience, and it has direct implications for how your child is learning — or not learning — to write right now.

Look at your child's age right now. Find their window. That is not a metaphor — that is where their brain is today, and it will not be there tomorrow.

 

The families whose children write like the Singaporean samples above are not lucky. They are not especially gifted. They simply started a structured daily practice during the prime window — and let the compounding do the rest.

 

The families who didn't start — who assumed the school was handling it, who waited to see if the gap would close itself, who planned to look into it after summer — are now dealing with a child who struggles with writing across every subject, whose grades don't reflect their intelligence, and who believes the problem is something wrong with them.

 

That belief, once formed, is extraordinarily difficult to change.

⚠ What Happens If You Don't Act

Every semester without a system is a semester the gap widens — and the window narrows.

The research is consistent and bleak on this point: children who enter middle school without writing proficiency stay below proficiency in 78% of cases without structured intervention. Not because they can't improve — because the intervention required after the prime window has passed is significantly more intensive, more expensive, and less effective than the simple daily practice that would have prevented the gap entirely. The children in your child's class right now who are ahead in writing are not smarter. They have a system. This is the difference between getting it now — while the window is wide open — and getting it later, when the same result takes three times the effort.

Chapter six

What You Can Give Your Child That Singapore Already Gives Every Child

The good news — and it is genuinely good news — is that the system Singapore uses is not complicated. It is not expensive. It does not require a degree in education or hours of parental involvement. It requires a sequence, a structure, and fifteen minutes per day.

 

That's it. Fifteen minutes of deliberate, sequential practice every day produces results that no amount of homework assignments, tutoring sessions, or writing prompts can replicate. Not because of magic, but because of compounding.

 

15 minutes × 5 days × 52 weeks = 65 hours per year of structured writing practice. Compounded over the elementary years. Building the exact neural architecture that Singaporean children have been building since they were three.

PISA 2025 Reading & Literacy Rankings

#1

🇸🇬

Singapore

543

#2

🇯🇵

Japan

516

#3

🇰🇷

South Korea

515

#4

🇸🇬

Taiwan

515

#5

🇸🇬

Estonia

511

13

🇺🇸

United States

503

Source: OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2022

Learn more about the system

Sources: National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), National Council of Teachers of English, American Educational Research Journal, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience