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Kandell, Leslie – Teacher, 1977
Finger-snapping, toe-tapping music is a prelude to penmanship practice. (Editor)
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Handwriting Skills, Language Arts, Musical Composition
Peer reviewedMcNaughton, David; Hughes, Charles; Clark, Karen – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1997
This study investigated effects of five proofreading conditions on the spelling performance of 12 college students with learning disabilities. Conditions were handwriting with no additional assistance, with a print dictionary, and with a handheld spelling checker; and word processing with no additional assistance and with a spelling checker. All…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Students, Handwriting, Higher Education
Peer reviewedSmits-Engelsman, Bouwien C. M.; Van Galen, Gerard P. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1997
Used writing tasks recorded on a computer-monitored XY tablet to differentiate between normal variations in psychomotor development and dysgraphia in 16 young children. Found that control of spatial accuracy, not allograph retrieval or size control, discriminated dysgraphic children from others. Poor writers were less accurate than proficient…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Delays, Dysgraphia, Handwriting
Peer reviewedBurrows, Evelyn Honor – Child Study Journal, 1994
Examined the words used by 20 mothers and 20 nonmothers to describe the writing and drawing products of preschool children. Found that mothers were more likely than nonmothers to identify the products using the same label as the child, but found no difference between the groups in the use of the terms "writing" and "drawing"…
Descriptors: Early Experience, Emergent Literacy, Freehand Drawing, Handwriting
Peer reviewedMartlew, Margaret; Sorsby, Angela – Learning and Instruction, 1995
The representational abilities of 24 preschool children were investigated in relation to their ability to use their knowledge of graphic notation. Although the children came from similar backgrounds, their responses showed varying constructs about the appropriate graphic notation to use in referential tasks. (SLD)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Handwriting, Individual Differences, Knowledge Level
Peer reviewedWilliams, Robert B.; Morea, Lillian – Reading Improvement, 1991
Explicates issues related to teaching, evaluating, and remediating handwriting, via a case study. States that children with handwriting problems need empathy, understanding, early identification, and remedial assistance. (SR)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Elementary Secondary Education, Handwriting, Remedial Instruction
Peer reviewedSweedler-Brown, Carol O. – Journal of Research and Development in Education, 1992
Study examined effects of training on positive grader bias toward nicely handwritten essays. Nine typed essays, nine in neat handwriting, and nine in poor handwriting were transcribed into the other modes. Graders trained to avoid bias and three controls graded the essays. Both groups showed significant bias toward good handwriting. (SM)
Descriptors: Bias, College Students, Essays, Expository Writing
Peer reviewedGraham, Steve – Childhood Education, 1994
Reviews literature comparing traditional manuscript alphabets to slanted manuscript alphabets and finds insufficient evidence to support requiring kindergarten, first-, and second-grade children to learn the slanted manuscript alphabet. Notes that since many children enter school knowing how to form their letters in the traditional style, learning…
Descriptors: Cursive Writing, Handwriting, Literature Reviews, Manuscript Writing (Handlettering)
Peer reviewedGreer, Tammy; Lockman, Jeffrey J. – Child Development, 1998
Two studies examined developmental changes in handwriting variability. Results indicated that, between 3 and 5 years, the number of grip patterns that children routinely use declines and the variability associated with pen-surface positioning declines. Older 3-year-olds used an adult grip pattern more often and were less variable in pen-surface…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Comparative Analysis, Developmental Stages
Peer reviewedArter, Christine; And Others – British Journal of Special Education, 1996
Teaching methods to develop the handwriting skills of children who have low vision are discussed. Difficulties are seen to result from problems with motor skills, visual factors, and mechanical difficulties. Stressed throughout is adaptation of the handwriting program to the particular needs of the individual child. (DB)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Handwriting, Individualized Instruction, Partial Vision
Peer reviewedBrogan, Patricia – Educational Leadership, 2000
Today's children enter classrooms with skills and expectations that challenge adults. Kids with superior keyboarding skills may resist penmanship lessons. Learning is a two-way process. Computer-literate kids should be encouraged to share skills with other students and teachers. Teachers should pass on acquired skills to students. (MLH)
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Educational Benefits, Elementary Secondary Education, Handwriting
Peer reviewedWoods, Carol S. – Montessori Life, 2001
Describes writing as a complex process requiring cooperation of cognitive, perceptual, and motor activities. Examines current trends in handwriting instruction and Montessori's approach to handwriting instruction. Describes the indirect preparation through Montessori materials and a direct teaching approach involving a simplification of the…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Eye Hand Coordination, Handwriting, Montessori Method
Christensen, Carol A. – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2004
Background: Orthographic-motor integration refers to the way in which orthographic knowledge is integrated with fine-motor demands of handwriting. A strong relationship has shown to exist between orthographic-motor integration and students' ability to produce creative and well-structured written text (De La Paz & Graham, 1995). This…
Descriptors: Grade 8, Written Language, Semantics, Intervention
Connelly, Vincent; Dockrell, Julie E.; Barnett, Jo – Educational Psychology, 2005
Undergraduates producing handwritten essays in university exams need to transcribe information onto the page in a rapid and efficient manner under considerable time pressure. In fact, capacity models of the writing process predict that the more automated students can make the transcription process then the more resources will be available for…
Descriptors: Writing Skills, Undergraduate Students, Essay Tests, Writing Processes
Costas, Elaine Fowler – 1996
The history of left-handedness can provide teachers and parents a better understanding of left-handed children and give those children more pride in their difference. No child should be made to feel that he or she is abnormal because of using the left hand, although some specific instruction for these students is necessary in handwriting. Many…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Educational Discrimination, Elementary Secondary Education, Handwriting

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