Guest guest Posted October 9, 2005 Report Share Posted October 9, 2005 Debi, If I may, might I point out a potential problem...When I was in Kindergarten in private school, I was taught a form of handwriting called Zaner-Bloser. Then when I went into the first grade in public school, they insisted I write with the D'Nealian method. I have learned to form some letters differently in Kindergarten that was now unacceptable in first grade. The public school I attended was rather harsh on me about it too. Add that to undiagnosed autism and you have a handwriting mess I am still trying to sort. Might I suggest that you consider all the different methods of letter formation currently used just to be sure the order in which a letter is formed in your puzzle does not confuse a child learning an opposing method. Maybe even consider having versions by writing method. The concept is great though. Just trying to give another perspective. > > Okay, I think I've come up with an idea, wanna run it by you all > first. What would you think about " Letter Better " . I would be a kit of > puzzles for all the letters of the alphabet, one kit for uppercase, > and one for lowercase. Each letter would be its own puzzle, make of > high-quality plastic that IS dishwasher-safe. Each letter would have > several pieces that would snap together. The thing is though, that > each piece would be numbered in the same sequence as if you were > writing it. So like a lowercase " a " would have a " 1 " on the part where > you would first put the pencil to start writing it, piece " 2 " would be > the next area the pencil would go, so on. The goal of this would be to > get kids used to creating a letter in the order it's to be written, so > when the get a pencil in their hands to start letter formation, they > will already have it imprinted how it's supposed to be designed. I > figure the puzzles would teach motor skills from the minipulative > aspect of the pieces, sequencing and number recognition from > connecting the numbers, and help with future motor planning by > teaching the steps of letter formation. > > What do you all think? Is this too much? I've seen so many kids > struggle with where to start to write a letter I thought something > like this might help them know. > > Debi > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.