writing.htm/20DEC2001
Writing
Show how letters are
made up of straight lines and parts of a circle:
Straight lines: l
x v w z Circle (or part of): o
c s and combinations of both.
A b is a line and circle. An s is most of a
circle drawn backwards and then most of another circle going the other way. You
can take letters to pieces: an h is a straight line down then up, a
small semi‑circle over the top and then straight down to the line; and so
on.
Have two lines ready
drawn on the blackboard about 6" or 15 cm apart (or on a sheet of paper, for individual teaching), one to write on
and the other to show the height of the small letters. Does the pupil know what
"top" and "bottom" mean?
Direction
Show that the letters
"sit on a line", and that you begin on the left side. If a young
child has not yet learned LEFT and RIGHT, put a marker of some kind (a paper
clip?) on the left side of the paper or a marker by the blackboard, and say,
"You start at this side." If this left‑right direction is
pointed out at the start, and a finger points out the letters or words as you
work, it is usually no trouble. Prevention of confusion with saw/was,
of/for/from depends on what you do at the beginning: the left‑right
direction becomes automatic. Trouble arises from starting with "whole
words" or "whole books".
To start with
"cat", show how you draw back‑up to the top line then keep
going round to the bottom line and then up a bit, 3/4 of a circle. Show on a
round clock how C starts not at the top, not at 12 o'clock, but at 2
o'clock, and goes BACK‑UP and round to 6 and up to 4. Have all the class
"draw a C in the air", swinging their arms from the shoulder.
Have one or two pupils come out and go over the C with chalk,
themselves, and then have the whole class draw a C in the air again and
say "kuh". Ideally we would try to sound the k sound without
the -uh bit, but it is not easy, and the extra sound does not bother most
people.
For the a say
"We start with a C, the same movement, again, but this time we keep
going, right round and then straight up to the top guide‑line and down to
the bottom line, and this is an a. " Have the pupils draw it in the
air saying a", the short vowel sound as in cat.
For a t show how
there are two beginnings, first a downward one, then a left‑right one,
and the cross on the t is the same height as the top guide‑line.
With two guide‑lines, the tall letters (except d) start above the
top line, and the 'tails' go below the bottom line. When you use the dot‑to‑dot
sheet, show how the letter starts at the big black dot, goes the way the arrow
points (and explain how arrows work), and when the dots change to dashes the
line goes there‑and‑back. If there is only one arrow, the whole
letter is completed before lifting the pencil from the page, as in c and a, but
t has two starts.
Parents can happily and
usefully be involved in this. The guidance is so simple, ‑ that the first
task is to learn to write and sound the three letters c..a..t, and to
get used to blending them into the word cat.
Before the pupil starts
to write, make sure that they have the correct pencil grip the first
time they hold a crayon or pencil. The thumb and side of the long (middle)
finger do the gripping, with the index finger sitting loosely on top. PREVENT
bad habits. If pencil grip is a problem, you can get a good, cheap plastic,
triangular pencil‑grip from N.E.S. Arnold of Nottingham or Taskmaster of
Leicester. Left‑handed writers will probably need to have their paper
more slanted (left side higher) than the right‑handed people.
You will see that the
picture of the cat is black and white, and is NOT part of some fascinating
story. The fascination is in learning to make letters talk. The picture is only
there in case the learner forgets the three letters, and can then remind
himself from the picture and not by asking the teacher. Pupils must ask us to
explain what they do not understand, but we want to make them as independent as
we can, from the start.
Let the pupil go over
each letter many times, with his finger, with a pale‑coloured crayon or
felt pen, then darker pen. Let him practise on scrap paper. He must go over a letter,
look at it, sound it, hear it, all at the same time. He must learn the sound of
c as in cat. If you wish him to learn "Cee says k", the
name and the sound, you can. In the end he will have to know both name and
sound, but at the beginning the sounds are essential.
Let the pupil go over
and over the letters until he knows them, writing and sounding. He must also
hear that c‑a‑t makes cat; he must be able to hear
the bits and join them, and hear that cat starts with the c
sound, then a, then t. This work lends itself to class
teaching. You can set out the alphabet on the big
card, pick out the three letters to make
the word cat and then show how you put the letters back in their place. You can do
this for all the letters as they are learned.
If the child is pressing
on too hard, in writing, turn the page over and let him feel the ridges he has
made. Tell him pressing on will make him tired. Buy a cheap (20p, 35p)
propelling pencil with a thin lead, so that it breaks when he presses too hard.
This works when nagging does not.
ã
Copyright 2000 by Elliot Right Way Books where copied or adapted from
“c-a-t=CAT”. Other material ã
copyright 2001 by Mona McNee