English

Teaching Spell Checkers to Teach: Pedagogical Program Synthesis for Interactive Learning

Human-Computer Interaction 2026-01-22 v2

Abstract

Spelling taught through memorization often fails many learners, particularly children with language-based learning disorders who struggle with the phonological skills necessary to spell words accurately. Educators such as speech-language pathologists (SLPs) address this instructional gap by using an inquiry-based approach to teach spelling that targets the phonology, morphology, meaning, and etymology of words. Yet, these strategies rarely appear in everyday writing tools, which simply detect and autocorrect errors. We introduce SPIRE (Spelling Inquiry Engine), a spell check system that brings this inquiry-based pedagogy into the act of composition. SPIRE implements Pedagogical Program Synthesis, a novel approach for operationalizing the inherently dynamic pedagogy of spelling instruction. SPIRE represents SLP instructional moves in a domain-specific language, synthesizes tailored programs in real-time from learner errors, and renders them as interactive interfaces for inquiry-based interventions. With SPIRE, spelling errors become opportunities to explore word meanings, word structures, morphological families, word origins, and grapheme-phoneme correspondences, supporting metalinguistic reasoning alongside correction. Evaluation with SLPs and learners shows alignment with professional practice and potential for integration into writing workflows.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2512.12115,
  title  = {Teaching Spell Checkers to Teach: Pedagogical Program Synthesis for Interactive Learning},
  author = {Momin N. Siddiqui and Vincent Cavez and Sahana Rangasrinivasan and Abbie Olszewski and Srirangaraj Setlur and Maneesh Agrawala and Hari Subramonyam},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2512.12115},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

IUI 2026

R2 v1 2026-07-01T08:23:06.374Z