Learn to write alphabets
Teaching Preschoolers to Write Letters At Home – Blue and Hazel
Are you wondering how to teach your preschooler to write letters of the alphabet? You can do it! We do this as part of our homeschool preschool and continue practicing for homeschool kindergarten.
Maybe your child is already scribbling down nonsense and calling them letters? That’s a good sign they are ready for more. I’ll share what we’ve done/are doing and my kids’ ages. Each one has been on their own timeline, and I think it’s important not to push that too much.
Writing starts way before letters are formed (think coloring/scribbling), and it will continue to be perfected long after preschool. Writing letters is a process that takes lots of practice! Hopefully this post gives you the confidence to start helping your child learn to write their name and the whole alphabet.
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What age do kids learn to write letters?
Personally, I’m a fan of waiting till at least age 4 or 5 to begin learning to write letters. But it really depends on your kids eagerness to begin.
My oldest son learned at age 5.5 ,my daughter was ready by age 4, and my 3rd (a boy) is 4.5 and just starting to show signs he is ready. I’ll probably wait with him till he turns 5 because there is NO RUSH.
If anything, starting too soon and expecting too much too soon can put some serious negative pressure on them when they just aren’t ready yet. I’ve learned this the hard way. Instead, focus on hand strength and coordination through coloring, legos, drawing, and Play Doh.
Learning to write all the letters in their first and last name is one of my goals by the end of our homeschool preschool. Kids begin to do a lot more writing in Kindergarten so it is helpful if they can write some letters by then.
Signs that your child is ready to learn to write letters
Before a child learns to write, they are going to come to the conclusion that letters have meaning.
They see it in books, when you write, on road signs, through shows and apps, and through seeing their name on everything. If you feel unsure if your preschooler is ready to write, ask yourself:
- Can they recognize letter names when they see them?
- Are they interested or asking how to write a letter? That was my hint!
- Do they pretend to write making scribbles or symbols for their “letters”?
- Do they know how to hold a pencil correctly from drawing and coloring?
- Are they experimenting trying to write letters in their name, even if it’s upside down and backwards?
I love this post on the stages of learning to write and draw. You will be able to see what stage your child is at and if they are developmentally ready!
How to teach a preschooler to write letters
Once your preschooler can recognize certain letters, it will make teaching writing easier. They’ll know what it is supposed to look like, and be familiar with it’s name and general appearance.
I tell everyone to use Busy Toddler’s Playing Preschool for a fun and worksheet free way to do preschool at home. It’s my favorite route to exposing them to the alphabet, songs, books, and more. Each day is short and mapped out for you! Here’s my full review on Busy Toddler’s preschool curriculum.
But to teach letters, I like to casually show them “their special letter”, which is the first letter of their name. Point out letters on cereal boxes and coloring books. Here are a few ways I like to begin teaching them to write letters at home.
1. Do TONS of pre-writing activities before attempting to write letters.
As preschoolers get older, they go from making marks on paper to being able to make circles and lines (or round faces with stick legs)!
Eventually, they can also draw shapes like triangles that use tilted lines. My favorite prewriting booklet is the purple Doodle booklet by The Good And The Beautiful. My kids both loved it. In fact, my reluctant oldest child even enjoyed doodling with this, after we backed off of formal handwriting. I saw he wasn’t ready and needed more hand coordination and strength!
2. Strengthen their hands
Anything that works on fine motor skills will help with hand writing later on, like:
- Drawing
- Coloring
- Tracing straight lines, tilted lines, and shapes like circles
- Painting
- Threading fruit loops
- Do A Dot Letter Stamping
- Drawing in salt, dirt, sand, or flour
- Using scissors
- Picking up pom pom balls with tongs
- Tracing fingers over glitter glue letters
3. Show them how to write the letters using sensory activities
Sensory letter writing is a fun way to make letters without having to use a pencil and paper yet. Think forming letters in the dirt or sand.
They can learn the motions and it’s fun! It’s helpful for kids to see you forming a letter, and to have an example to look at. Note that just because they watched you write the letter B top to bottom doesn’t mean they’ll think to do it that way.
There are lots of fun ways to get preschoolers to start forming letters on their own! Some I’ve seen are:
- Forming letters out of shaving cream or sprinkles in a pan.
- Write out a letter with glue and let your kid place noodles or beans on the glue.
- Bath paint on the wall writing out the letter with their finger
3. Write on blank paper
Since kids tend to start out writing BIG letters, I’ve found it’s easier to start on one letter at a time on a large blank piece of paper.
I usually write out the uppercase or lowercase letter somewhere on the blank paper so they have an example to look at. They can take a different colored marker and trace over your letter.
4. Trace letters on paper
Practicing on lined tracing paper teaches them to pay attention to proportions within the lines, and it’s what they’ll be using in kindergarten.
This is a tracing notebook we have used. I like this book because the letters are already there to trace, which saves me from having to make a ton of dotted letters by hand. And, the first page of each letter has arrows and numbers to show the hand strokes.
A lot of lined notebooks have just one letter for kids to trace and a bunch of blank lines for them to fill in the letter by memory. These are too advanced to start with, because they haven’t had enough practice yet to remember the motions.
My son needed to trace at least 10 of the same letter before really being able to draw it from memory. If blank lined paper is all you have, then you can fill in letters by hand. I dotted in one full line of capital B and one line of lowercase b.
Or, write the letters for them in pencil and have them trace over them with a marker.
A printable tracing workbook designed to be used side by side with the “Teach Your Child To Read In 100 Easy Lessons”
Update January 2020: We recently tried these new printable letter tracing pages with 100 pages of practice with my 4. 5 year old.
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Teach preschoolers to write their name
If you want to motivate your preschooler to write, then start with fun ways to teach them the letters in their name!
Kindergarten classes like to have kids able to write their name coming into kindergarten with the first letter being a capitol and the rest of their name in lowercase.
I found these awesome FREE printable name tracing worksheets and loved how easy it was to customize the font, size, you can even save the file to print over and over, or just bookmark the page.
We also love these dry erase letter tracing cards! They come in uppercase and lowercase. Note that if your child has two of the same letters in their name these ones only come with one of each.
Be encouraging
While it’s easy to want your kid to do it right (and I do think the hand strokes are important), handwriting takes A LOT of practice. If they feel criticized and corrected instead of encouraged, they could easily be too frustrated to keep going.
I tried to use phrases like “That’s almost it! Make sure the b touches the middle line next time” or “Good start! Now try again making the loop a little more round.” I found encouragement worked better for my son (who gets discouraged easily) rather than saying, “don’t do that” or “the loops aren’t round enough.”
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Should you start with uppercase or lowercase letters?
Don’t worry too much about this.
Some people start with all uppercase letters first and lowercase letters second, since uppercase letters are a bit easier.
It’s a good time to introduce that names are always spelled with a capital letter if that’s new to your preschooler. It’s also good when reading out loud to make the connection that every sentence starts with a capital letter.
Just want a handwriting curriculum?
I hope you see that for preschool level…you truly can teach your kid to write their name and learn to form letters.
But if you are like me and want something you can whip out once a day to practice that’s planned out for you…we are LOVING Handwriting Without Tears. It’s a SOLID program used by homeschoolers and in elementary schools.
This is their pre-k version called Kickstart Kindergarten. We buy the workbook and chalkboard. Nothing else, and you don’t need the teacher’s guide.
DO buy their official chalkboard and a pack of chalk snapped into 1 inch pieces. The smaller pieces encourage proper grip, and the chalkboard helps them write the BIG version of the letter and focus on which stokes come first.
Then, using a tiny sponge cut up, they’ll erase it using the same chalk strokes getting to form the letter twice.
We are now using Handwriting Without Tears as our main way to teach letter formation
I actually am having my now 1st and 2nd grader go back and do the kindergarten and 1st grade levels.
Somehow they’d slipped into some wonky habits and were doing a lot of bottom to top letters, which isn’t great for neatness or speed or cursive later on.
They do 1-2 pages a day. The orange kindergarten book was so easy for my 1st grader she flew through it in 1 month. The boxes and letters are larger in that book than the 1st grade book. And there’s more repetition for each letter.
I feel good knowing they are reviewing letter formation, and it’s helping me to teach them things like bumping the top line and bottom line. Plus, I’m loving the memorable phrases like “Frog jump” for letters you have to pick up your pencil. Or “Magic c” for letters that begin with that curve.
I’ll probably gently introduce my 4.5 year old to letter tracing letters this year using sensory bins and play…and start him on Kick Start Kindergarten next year around age 5 or 5.5 towards the end of preschool. He has to be ready though, or I’ll wait. Sometimes preschool is just too early, especially for boys!
Handwriting mistakes to avoid
Forcing your kid to write before they are ready.Sometimes kids are capable but uninterested.
My philosophy is that if they are not interested, but capable, I don’t force it unless it’s something I deem necessary. I want my kids to be writing letters by Kindergarten (age 5.5-6). But, if they are 4 and uninterested, then wait 6 months and try again!
The majority of writing begins in the Kindergarten years anyway.
Doing worksheets before any pre-writing activities.If they are interested in letters but can’t seem to follow directions to trace or copy, then back up and do some fun pre-writing activities.
I didn’t realize that “pre-writing” was an official thing, because kids naturally do some of these things first. Think drawing shapes and lines (my 3.5 year old currently draws mama as a big round circle with about 5 lines of hair).
Also coloring, holding a paintbrush, beading, drawing letters in the air, or anything that strengthens hand muscles and makes writing easier later on is considered pre-writing.
Letting them write or trace the wrong way.It can be a lot more work to correct a bad habit than to make sure they learn the strokes correctly the first time. I’m living this. You can’t hand them a worksheet and walk away. You’ll have to stay at watch till a habit is formed.
One of the most common mistakes I’ve seen all my kids try to do is write from bottom to top.
Some examples are writing the letter O starting at the bottom instead of top, or my son wanting to write the tail of the lowercase “g” in his name before circle on top.
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How to teach a left handed child to write
My oldest is a clear lefty and my middle is a righty. There is not a huge difference when teaching them to write letters, so don’t be too intimidated!
- Make sure they have a proper pencil grip. I have them pinch the pencil with their thumb and index finger, resting the pen on their middle finer.
- Hold the pencil close to the tip for better control, but far enough away that they can still see what they are writing without having to bend their wrist all wonky.
- Tip the paper a tad, so the bottom right corner of the page is bit down. This is opposite of the way I tilt my page being right handed.
This is an excellent in depth post on Tips for teaching left handed kids to write if you want to read more.
You can teach your child to write at home
If you are beginning your homeschool journey and feel overwhelmed, know that you have what it takes to teach your child to write their letters! Homeschoolers have the freedom to go at their own pace, and it’s a great way to spend one on one time with your child.
If your child will be attending kindergarten, then there will be PLENTY of letter practice there. Or, consider doing kindergarten at home! Kindergarten teachers know that some kids can write many letters and others only some or none at all. They really try to meet kids where they are at!
Either way, helping your child to learn their letters at home will help them so much! What is one thing you worry about when it comes to teaching handwriting? Let me know in the comments!
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Learning How To Write Letters - Children Need 3 Key Skills
The steps to learning how to write letters for children is actually quite complex. The skill of handwriting requires many motor learning experiences prior to the actual act of writing letters. These experiences are not with a pencil either but with gross motor skills, fine motor skills, visual perceptual skills and cognitive skills.
The development of handwriting is a complex task that requires motor skills, cognitive skills and neuromotor skills. It is not always easy to identify exactly what piece of the “puzzle” is missing if a child is having difficulties with handwriting. The three skills needed to help children develop the skill of learning how to write letters are:
Complete visual representation of the letter
Can the child accurately identify the letters that you are practicing? Provide children with letter cards or alphabet charts for proper letter formation. An example of alphabet charts are Classroom Wall Cards and Alphabet Strips.
Another example for alphabet charts is Alphabet Wall Cards Handwriting Without Tears Style Font.
Read more about the four components of letter recognition.
Recognition of the line segments that form the letter
Can the child recognize horizontal, vertical and curved lines? This skill requires cognitive skills, visual memory and visual spatial skills. Many children today start writing letters at too early of an age resulting in poor habits. When children practice pre-writing skills before learning how to write letters, they may develop better handwriting skills.
If you are working with very young children (early preschool age) there are other skills that can be practiced that do not require a pencil. Read about 10 activities to get children ready for pre-writing skill here.
When children are learning how to write letters and ready to start practicing line segments, these resources may be helpful:
Prewriting Activity Pages includes 50 black and white pictures to trace and color. This is a “just right” activity for children who are learning to write, draw and color. Each picture has dotted lines for the child to trace to practice visual motor skills. Once completed, the child can paint or color the picture. Various prewriting practice strokes are included throughout the packet such as vertical lines, horizontal lines, diagonal lines, curves, circles, squares, loops, wavy lines and more! FIND OUT MORE.
Fading Lines and Shapes includes worksheets that gradually increase in visual motor difficulty while decreasing visual input for line and shape formation. There are 18 worksheets for line formations ie horizontal, vertical, curves, waves, diagonals, spikes and combinations. There are 9 worksheets for shape formations ie circle, cross, square, rectangle, X, triangle, diamond, oval and heart. This download is great for push in therapy, therapy homework or consultation services in the classroom. FIND OUT MORE.
The Weekly and Daily Sign In Sheets for Early Writers provides a progression of pre-writing skills:
- vertical lines (2 years old)
- horizontal lines
- horizontal curved lines
- vertical curved lines
- circles
- plus sign
- squares
- diagonal lines
- X shape
- triangles (5 years+ years)
- Full name
The goal of the Weekly and Daily Sign In Sheets is to:
- infuse the day with pre-writing skills in the student’s natural environment
- prevent bad habits from developing when writing letters
- practice visual motor skills
Ability to reproduce the sequence and direction of the line segments to form the letters
When it comes to learning how to write letters, can the child coordinate all the cognitive and motor skills needed to form letters? They need to be able to write lines in different directions and patterns with fluency and speed. For children who struggle with coordination skills, this can be where the task of handwriting becomes very difficult.
Handwriting Stations include the materials to create a handwriting station on a tri-fold or in a folder. The station includes proper letter formation for capital and lower case letters, correct posture, pencil grip, warm up exercises, letter reversals tips and self check sheet. In addition, there are 27 worksheets for the alphabet and number practice (Handwriting without Tears® style and Zaner-Bloser® style). This download is great for classroom use, therapy sessions or to send home with a student. FIND OUT MORE
Reference: Schickedanz JA (1999)Much More than the ABCs: The Early Stages of Reading and Writing.Washington, DC: National Association for the Education of Young Children.
Want more freebies? Check out these Alphabet Bingo Printables.
Concerned about letter formation and reversals? Read more about Letter Reversals.
Learning to write block letters of the Russian alphabet.
TrainerElectronic library
Raising children, today's parents educate the future history of our country, and hence the history of the world.
- A.S. Makarenko
Learning to write block letters of the Russian alphabet. Trainer
- A
- B
- B
- G
- D
- E
- Yo
- F
- Z
- and
- Y
- K
- L
- M
- H
- O
- P
- R
- C
- T
- W
- F
- X
- C
- H
- W
- W
- b
- S
- b
- E
- Yu
- I
- Tasks
This section contains a simulator that teaches preschoolers 5-6 years old how to write the correct block letters of the Russian alphabet. The simulator consists of a collection of developing children's recipes, arranged in alphabetical order on colored tabs.
Red tabs contain copybooks for studying vowels, blue tabs for studying consonants, gray tabs for studying separating marks. The green tab contains developmental tasks and exercises for consolidating and practical application of writing skills in block letters.
Printing is part of learning to read and write early. This lesson develops attention, fine motor skills, graphic skills, promotes better memorization of the alphabet and improves literacy.
Performing developmental tasks and exercises, the child will get acquainted with block letters, learn how to write them, and also learn the Russian alphabet.
You can print as many copybooks as you need to repeatedly practice writing letters, reinforce your skills, and get a successful learning outcome.
Here various methods of teaching writing in block letters are proposed, which allows you to individually select the most suitable option for your child or put into practice all the proposed methods, making the learning process more interesting and varied for a preschooler.
Tips for working with spelling:
- Let's learn the vowels first. They are simpler and easier to pronounce and remember, at this stage of learning there are no problems even for children with speech disorders. Letters denoting the same vowel sound are recommended to be studied in pairs A - I, O - E, U - Yu, E - E, Y - I.
- After vowels, we study consonants. The sequence of study does not matter. As a rule, the letter P and other letters, the pronunciation of which is still difficult for the baby, are studied at the end. It is not recommended to study paired consonants in a row (B - P, G - K, D - T, Z - C, V - F, F - W) - it is difficult for a child at this age not to confuse them by ear.
- There are different approaches to the order of learning the letters, so you can use another, in your opinion, the most acceptable variant of the sequence of letters.
- Practice with your child for no more than 15 to 20 minutes.
- When completing tasks, the preschooler should hold the pen or pencil correctly, without straining the fingers too much.
- It is very important to properly organize the child's workplace: be sure to pay attention to whether it is comfortable for the child to sit at the table, and also where the light source is located. For right-handers, the lamp should be on the left side, and for left-handers, on the right.
- Don't forget to praise your child, even if he doesn't do well on tasks. From classes, a preschooler should receive only positive emotions. This is a prerequisite for further successful learning.
- Remember that learning should be in the form of an exciting game. In no case should a child be forced to fill out prescriptions - this can consolidate an aversion to learning to read and write for many years.
* Methods V.G. were used to create the simulator. Dmitrieva , O.S. Zhukova , M.O. Georgieva , M.P. Tumanovskaya .
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"The printer is the ass of the computer, because what comes out of it is what the computer has inside" - Gleb, 5 years old |
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How to learn to write in a foreign language and learn the alphabet on your own: useful tips
Learning a new alphabet, syllabary or other writing system can be an extremely difficult task. The difficulty of this task depends on the complexity of the writing system you are trying to master.
If we talk about English, then learning to write will not be difficult for people, than the language has a similar writing style, that is, it uses Latin letters.
But learning to write in a language completely different from your own, such as Chinese, Japanese, Hindi, Arabic or Hebrew, is a completely different matter that requires attention, time and patience.
Below are some helpful tips on how to learn to write in a foreign language and learn the alphabet on your own.
Do not learn the whole alphabet at once
Divide the study of the alphabet into parts. Try to learn a few letters per lesson. Do not memorize the entire unfamiliar alphabet in one breath.
Pay particular attention to letters that look similar in appearance but sound different, such as the letter “r” in Russian and English.
Article in the topic:
An unusual way to effectively memorize words in English
Find an association between an unknown letter and a familiar object
Try to associate the shape of a letter with a familiar object: some new letters may look like letters or numbers in your native alphabet , others may remind you of the appearance of animals, objects, or people.
Books that teach children to read use this method, so it will be very helpful if you apply it to your goal of learning a new language.
Article in the topic:
Teaching English to a child
"The skill of the master sets"
Practice your writing skills as often as possible. Learn the standard way of writing letters: that is, memorize the shape, direction and order of strokes in writing a particular letter. This will help you memorize the new alphabet faster and learn how to write letters correctly. Write letters as much as possible.
If you have the opportunity, take a calligraphy course. This is especially useful if you are learning Chinese or Japanese. The calligraphy course will allow you to improve your handwriting and understand other people's handwriting.
Related Article:
8 Precious Tips to Improve Your English Writing Skills
Transliterating or Writing Foreign Words in Your Native Alphabet
Practice writing the letters of a new alphabet or words by transliterating them in your native alphabet. Then vice versa: try to transliterate them back into the letters of the new alphabet.
You can also practice your writing skills by journaling or chatting with friends who speak the language.
You can find pen pals interested in learning languages and helping others learn their native language at mylanguageexchange.com .
Article in the topic:
9 English words that came from other languages
Reading
Try to read simple texts written in the language you are learning as often as possible. Even if you don't know all the letters or symbols, you can pick out some of the words and guess the rest.
Look for names of famous people or places, as well as loanwords from your native language, as they are relatively easy to decipher.
At first you will probably find that you have to say each letter individually before you know or pronounce the whole word. Over time, you will be able to recognize words by their shape, and you will need to pronounce each letter only in completely unfamiliar words.