Teach Your Kids to Write - Free and Frugal Resources for Handwriting




Summary: A frugal approach to handwriting curriculum for homeschoolers and early elementary kids using these inexpensive handwriting resources.  Teach your homeschooled preschoolers or kindergarten kids to write their letters when they are ready. This post may included affiliate links to products that we love and have used or would use in our  own homeschool. Please see my disclosure policy.


Do you have young ones who are eager to learn how to write?  

Do they show signs like playing a lot with crayons, noticing letters and signs, or making lots of marks and shapes on paper?  Do they already know the alphabet?

Today, I'd like to share my guide to handwriting, using simple frugal resources for the basics of handwriting, including:

- Introducing the A,B,C's
- Learning to write the letters 
- Simple copywork activities using your child's own words
- Practicing handwriting with Draw, Write, Now, link below.

You don't have to use an established or expensive handwriting program.  We didn't.  Instead we found two frugal resources for teaching handwriting, which I will discuss below.

TIP - Make writing meaningful to your child by using her own words whenever possible.  

Here's how we approach handwriting, starting with the A, B, C's.

1.  Introducing the A,B,C's

Using the Library - We introduced the ABC's through fun alphabet books from the library.  You know, those books that start with "A is for Apple", etc, with lovely photos to go with them.


The Big Book of Alpha Tales - This book has very funny stories for each letter of the alphabet, with mini books to make for each one. (Approximately $5.00)

Using Clay or Magnets - Sometimes we made the letters out of clay.  I also got my daughter a set of magnet letters for the frig.  These are readily available at the drug store.

I just put them down low on our frig, and my daughter loved rearranging them into little designs.  And through her play, she learned the shapes of the letters.

Next, she was ready to learn how to write her letters.

2.  Writing the ABC's with this Frugal Handwriting Curriculum

from MelissaAndDoug Storytelling Paper

We used a variety of activities to help her learn to form her letters....including:


- copying large letters onto the chalkboard
- practicing writing the letters in the air
- making letter shapes in fingerpainting
- even using pudding!  

I gave my daughter a lot of time to explore the shapes and learn her letters.  When they are ready start with the capital letters first, using this chart above as to how to shape the letters.  

But if your child decides to write them a different way, starting at the bottom instead of at the top, let it go if their letters are legible.

Once she could write the letters of the alphabet, we went on to copywork, using storytelling papers, see below.  This frugal packet goes for about 6 dollars and has 50 heavy weight handwriting paper for your use.  Or just goggle handwriting paper, and chose a free one with wide lines.

3.  Frugal Handwriting Homemade Copywork



Once my daughter could write her letters, I looked for some very wide lined paper, which had a blank space on half of it, for coloring.  

I found Storytelling Paper from MelissaAndDoug at my local teacher's store, but it can also be ordered online for just a few dollars.

We always started with drawing first, then I asked my daughter about the picture.

DRAWING  

So first, I would ask my daughter to draw a picture.  Often it was something that she had done the day before, or a favorite animal, or two.  Then she would tell me about it.  Drawing is a great way to build fine motor skills, of course.

COPYWORK  

I listened to her words, then I would write down a few of her 
words, so she could then copy them onto the lines on her paper.  

And there you have it - Homemade copywork.

My goal was just that the letters be legible. The important thing is that my daughter was using her own written works to communicate. 


Neatness and goals:  Neatness and staying in the lines will come, but often it takes a lot of practice.

I suggest not focusing much on that, but instead on helping your child practice writing, using her own words for copy work.  

The writing sample above is excellent work for a young handwriter who is not struggling with handwriting.  It is going to be a messy thing for quite a while, and that is more than ok.

Our last step was to practice handwriting, using frugal books from Draw, Write, Now, which involved copywork with short stories.

4. Building Handwriting Skills 


I was delighted when I found 
Draw Write Now. Each writing lesson included a shape or animal to draw, and a very short story to copy. 

Drawing first helped her to relax.  The more relaxed your child is, the better they will write.

The Draw, Write, Now series is a homeschool handwriting curriculum that consists of eight books, each with a different theme, and all written at the same reading level, around 2nd grade.

I took my daughter to the nearby children’s book store and she chose Book 1 - On the Farm, Kids, Critters. It was full of her favorite animals to draw.



My daughter's handwriting greatly improved from doing this easy to teach program.....Click here to read more of my review.....of Draw, Write Now.

If you have been following my series on handwriting, you already are probably familiar with my post on fun fine motor activities 

These activities help to develop the small muscles of the hand, key for little writers.   If your child has trouble grasping her pencil, you might like to check out Fun Ways to a Mature Grasp, or Grasping Aids and Devices and the other posts I have on handwriting struggles.  Just click on "handwriting" and scroll down. 

This year my daughter is now in college, writing essays, etc. But it all started with these simple, frugal resources for handwriting.





Thanks for stopping by BJ's Homeschool,


Betsy





Betsy is a former O.T, preschool teacher and published author of children's stories.  She is mom to her 2e college grad whom she homeschooled through high school.  She blogs at BJ's Homeschool about the early yearshigh schoolcollegeand is the author of "Homeschooling High School with College in Mind".  She offers homeschool help through messages at BJ's Consulting.



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Homeschool Middle School Writing - A Teen-Led Approach





Summary:  Homeschool middle school resources for doing middle school writing, with 3 different approaches to teach writing to young teens.  Note - This post may included affiliate links to products that we love and have used or would use in our  own homeschool. Please see my disclosure policy.



At BJ's Homeschool, we kept our interest based focus during the middle school years, too.  

This was especially true in our approach to writing.  Encouraging written expression is so important, and finding ways that are child or teen-led can make all the difference! 

So we followed my daughter's interests, and that led to develop her middle school writing skills, three ways: through story writing, nonfiction writing, and then research report writing in her areas of interest.  

And these three approaches may help your middle schooler, too.



1.  Story Writing   

When my daughter was a 7th grader, she was all about story writing.  She loved to read and try her hand at mysteries and other stories.  Then she began working on a science fiction story at co-op.  It was something that she wanted to continue, even after the class ended. 

So in 7th grade, I introduced her to the National Novel Writing Month.(NaNoWriMo)  And we got their great writing book,  No Plot? No Problem.  This served as a helpful guide to my daughter, as she worked on story writing.  We also connected with their facebook community page, so that my teen could connect with other middle and high school writers.

NaNovWriMo encourages kids and teens to write something every day, and work on a long short story or even a novel.  But it doesn't have to be that complicated.  Just working on writing every day is a great goal.  

My daughter wanted to work on a short story, so we dropped our other homeschool courses and just focused on writing in November.  We would just gather up all of our favorite blankets, and write on the couch.  

National Novel Writing Month. helped her to track her progress, giving her pep talks and support, and also connected her to others online.  

Then, later on, my daughter wanted to write about her field trips with our co-op.  For that, she needed to learn more about nonfiction writing. 

They encourage kids and adults to write every day during the month of November.  

But their site has a bunch of resources for story writing which can be used at any time of the year.



One of these is the Young Novelist's Notebook for Middle Schoolers.

2. A Nonfiction Focus


To learn how to write field trip stories and more, we turned to Spectrum Writing. 

My daughter wrote about her favorite field trips, and got one article published in a magazine for kids and teens.  

It is not that hard to do. Here is the online magazine she wrote for, Creative Kids.  They regularly look for child and teen articles, so send them in if your child requests that.

Then, later, we took on another aspect of nonfiction, that of writing research reports.



3.   Research Report Writing


How to Write a Research Report

One day, while we were studying science together, we saw that her curriculum called for a research report.  My young teen wanted to write about her favorite animal, but she was not confident in her research writing skills. 

So we searched the shelves of our local bookstore, the Children’s Bookshop (www.childrens-bookshop.com), and found the book How to Write a Research Report. 

This book turned the process of report writing into a series of easy steps! 

"Sometimes the hardest part of report writing is just getting started. The worksheets in How to Write a Research Report could be much less daunting than staring at a blank page! 

When my daughter finished working through this book, she had written her first middle school research report on her favorite topic."  Click here to read the rest of my review, if you like.

So that's the three ways we did writing during the middle school years.   

What are your favorite resources for middle school writing? Whatever way your teen wants to write.

The important thing is that they are expressing themselves in written language....If you have a little time for a comment, I would love hearing from you!


Thanks for stopping by BJ's Homeschool,


Betsy
.   


Betsy is mom to her now college grad, whom she homeschooled through high school.  She blogs at BJ's Homeschool, about the early yearshighschool
collegegifted/2e and wrote -Homeschooling High School with College in Mind, 2nd Edition,   She offers homeschool help through messages at BJ's Consulting and has had some of her articles picked up by the Huffington Post.


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