Improve Your Child’s Handwriting With These Fun Games

Improving your child’s handwriting doesn’t have to be boring and tiring. Here’s how to do it thanks to some fun games.
Improve your child's handwriting with these fun games

Calligraphy is a writing skill that can be improved. To do this, it is enough to dedicate a few hours a day to exercising it. If your goal is to help your child achieve more than beautiful and legible writing, this article will teach you how you can do it.

Enhance the strength of his fingers

To have good handwriting, you need to strengthen the child’s fingers. Keep in mind that it is with the fingers that he holds the pencil and that much of the movement he realizes in writing is entrusted to the fingers.

To achieve this, we recommend that you buy him some plasticine that he can cut into pieces and shape as he likes.

Also give him some papers and teach him to tear them apart. In this case it is not so important that it follows the lines of a figure, but rather that it supports the paper well and makes the tears using the index and thumb.

Put at his disposal crayons, colored pencils, brushes to paint with watercolors …  Your child needs to practice with pencils and brushes to be able to master these tools. This will strengthen his still weak fingers and practice beautiful writing.

Check that you carry out all the games and his movements correctly, and participate too. It is a great excuse to spend moments together, having fun and learning at the same time.

Play piano using mostly the hand you use to write. Or, if you prefer, show him how to pluck the strings of a guitar.

Offer him some scissors to cut. The scissors are held with the thumb and forefinger: fingers which, as we now know, play an important role in the execution of the strokes.

Let him write with a computer keyboard. In reality, children need to write mainly by hand and use the keyboard less. In the beginning, however, when he is starting to learn to type, the keyboard can help him improve the agility and mastery of his fingers, as long as he does not abuse this instrument.

Play with strokes to improve your handwriting

Performing strokes sequentially one after the other is the best way to get your child to learn to write well. For this reason, we recommend that you encourage him to do stretches for at least one hour a day.

Teach him, for example, how to make spirals, bigger, smaller, with more or less turns, in color … Remember that the practice requires a little fun, to be more captivating.

Try to make a sketch of one of his favorite characters, using only points. For example, if your child likes Mickey Mouse, look for a drawing, put it under a blank sheet of paper, trace its outline and outline its main features. However, instead of drawing it with lines, we advise you to mark points separated by a prudent distance.

After you have sketched the mouse, ask your child to draw it by joining the dots and without lifting the pencil from the paper.  This is a fun exercise that is great for learning how to control your strokes and improve your handwriting.

Another recommended activity for calligraphy is to give the child a notebook with large lines and teach him to draw the Greek (the continuous repetition of the same drawing without lifting the pencil from the paper) square, oval, pointed …

Give him freedom so that he performs free strokes at will. Surely, when he was younger, your child loved to write on the walls and on whatever surface he found in front of him.

This, then, may be a good time to allow him to draw where he was previously forbidden. Of course, without exaggerating. For example, give him some colored chalk and allow him to graffiti on the wide sidewalk in front of your garage.

Improve your child’s handwriting with these fun games

there are many games that can improve your handwriting

Mothers, to improve your child’s handwriting it is absolutely essential that, in addition to these activities, you take the time to teach him how to draw all the letters he is learning in school well.

To stimulate him, you can reward him with a star or an “excellent”, when he can do it in the best possible way.

Remember that when your child starts to write, he must sit correctly: with his back straight and glued to the chair, one hand holding the paper and the other with his elbow resting on the table. It is absolutely forbidden to “lie down” on the paper or stand hunchbacked, because these are attitudes that damage his posture and worsen his writing.

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