Learn Handwriting!

Description

 Perfectly perforated pages to practice your penmanship with a pencil! Ok, that's all I have for P's, but your student can practice lots of P's and other letters/words/sentences on the large, colorful pages in this book. The print book uses a traditional style (ball and stick letters.) In the beginning, each letter is shown in both upper and lower case with arrows to guide their strokes. There are some shaded letters to trace and then 4 lines for practice. Dotted half lines are in red with top/bottom lines in blue for the print book and all in gray for the cursive (half inch in both books.) Once you work through a page per letter, you move to a page of 5 words - one page with all A words (Adam/all/ant/ate/as), then a page of all B words (bat/Bert/big/blue/by), etc. The next pages practice a sentence per page, each sentence using words that start with a common letter. You practice the sentence 8 times after tracing a light version of the words. Ants are awake. Bees buzz by. Cute cubs climb, etc. There is a page of all numbers, days of the week, months, and some fun random animal illustrations in the back without the words shown. Your student writes in the words themselves. This is a very user friendly, independent, do a page a day kind of book. Use them as an introduction or for some remediation. The cursive book follows much the same format with arrows to guide the strokes. The style is traditional with a slight slant (the Q looks like a circle with a tail, and the G looks like the General Mills logo.) First you do the individual letters, then words, then sentences, numbers, days and months. Some of the words and sentences are a bit longer than in the print book, such as: cow/coat/Canada/camp/crab and Elephants enjoy each evening. In the back, kids have to rewrite a printed sentence in cursive, such as Birds fly south because it is too far to walk. And Oysters call their friends on shell phones. It's cute, eh? 96pp, reproducible, from Peter Pauper Press. ~Sara

Teaching Method
Traditional
Teacher-centered curriculum commonly used in classrooms that may include a text, teacher manual, tests, etc.
Charlotte Mason
A methodology based on the work of a 19th century educator who maintained that children learn best from literature (Living Books), not textbooks.
Classical
A methodology based on the Latin Trivium (three stages of learning), including the grammar stage (memorization and facts), logic stage (critical thinking), and rhetoric stage (developing/defending ideas).
Unit Study
A thematic or topical approach centered around one topic that integrates multiple subject areas.
Montessori (Discovery)
A methodology based on the work of a 20th century educator that emphasizes student and sensory-driven discovery learning and real-life applications.
Other
Other methodologies
Religious Content
Secular
Contains content contrary to common Christian beliefs (i.e. evolution).
Neutral
Avoids religious or theoretical topics or presents multiple viewpoints without preference.
Christian/Religious
Faith-based or including instructional religious content.
Learning Modality
Auditory
Learns through listening, talking out loud or reading out loud.
Visual
Learns through seeing, prefers written instructions and visual materials.
Kinesthetic/Tactile (Hands-On)
Learns through moving, doing and touching.
Multi-Sensory
Curriculum that employ a variety of activities/components.
Presentation
Sequential
Curriculum progresses through well-defined learning objectives. Emphasizes mastery before moving to the next topic.
Spiral
Topics and concepts are repeated from level to level, adding more depth at each pass and connecting with review.
Conceptual/Topical
Focus is on the “why,” often with a unifying concept as well as specific skills; coverage may be broader.
Teacher Involvement
Low Teacher Involvement
Student-led materials; parent acts as a facilitator.
Medium Teacher Involvement
A mix of teacher-led time and independent student work.
High Teacher Involvement
Teacher-led lessons; may utilize discussions, hands-on activities and working together.
Additional Materials Required
No other materials needed
Everything you need is included.
Other Materials Required
There are additional required resources that are a separate purchase.
Other Materials Optional
There are additional resources mentioned or recommended but are not absolutely necessary.
Consumable
Consumable
Designed to be written in; not reusable.
Non-Consumable
Not designed to be written in; reusable.