Encouraging Your Chid To Write
Most children enjoy learning if the teaching process is fun and exciting. Children
love to create, they love to play, and they enjoy helping around the house.
Combining these elements into learning can help your child through the most
difficult academic struggles. A number of young children experience difficulties
as they first begin to write. Both writing and creative writing are influential
to future success, happiness, and well-being.
Writing is a basic part of everyday life. We write notes, grocery lists, checks,
and letters. Allow your child to be a part of those ordinary writing activities.
Your young writer will enjoy helping out by making out the grocery list. Ask
him for his input as you decide what items you need.
Make play checks out of plain paper and collect a few envelopes. When you
pay your bills, let your child write out his own checks. This fun role-playing
activity not only encourages writing, but teaches your child how to address
an envelope and gives him an understanding of how to write a check, both valuable
lessons for the future. This activity can also be used to help your child learn
his address.
Encourage your child to write letters. Writing to Santa or the Easter Bunny
can motivate a child to pick up a pencil. If you have long distance relatives,
let her write to them about an exciting event like loosing a tooth. Letters
to favorite television characters, singers, or athletes can be fun for young
children as well as more experienced writers. Incorporate the use of technology
into writing. Allow your child to use the computer to email letters to her
grandparents or friends.
When your little one is first learning to write, provide a comfortable, sturdy
surface for her to practice at. Age appropriate furniture, like the Galt
kids table and chairs, is the perfect height for your child to write, color, or
play. Making a special area just for her may spark more of an interest in writing.
As your child gets older and expands his vocabulary, more advanced writing
activities can prove to be fun. Use simple games to promote writing and creativity.
Select a category like foods or animals and write a word that fits that topic
for every letter A to Z. This game can even be used to review history or geography
by making the category states or presidents.
Have him make his own collectible character cards. He can create his own super
heroes and draw their pictures on index cards. Then let him write a short description
of the character and list his special powers. This activity stimulates the
imagination and can provide hours of fun. Your child can even develop games
with his new trading cards.
Encourage your child to keep a daily journal. Some children will enjoy writing
about their day and their feelings. For those who are not interested in writing
about themselves each day or those who may have trouble thinking of something
to write, encourage a fiction journal. Your child can pretend to be whoever
or whatever he pleases and write about his adventures. Make writing fun and
your child will look forward to it.
See Next Article:
Encouraging Creativity