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The Educational Value of WriteOn!
Now Available: Write
On! DVD Tutor Kit in Japanese & Violet’s
Alphabet Jamboree MUSIC CD!
NOW AVAILABLE Write On!® Printing DVD Tutor Kit in (SPANISH)
The
alphabet is everywhere in a child’s life.
From the letters on toy building blocks to the
child’s name stenciled on the wall in his/her
room, children see these shapes and recognize
at a very young age that these are important icons.
Knowing and using these icons is how dad reads
the newspaper every morning or how mom writes
the grocery list she keeps on the fridge. As young
children play “house” and other creative
games in which they emulate adults, they crave
the ability to read and write as independently
and easily as they see the adults doing so in
daily life. Although memorizing the alphabet can
be as easy as regularly singing the “ABC”
song, applying that knowledge to writing is a
more complicated process.
Learning to recognize and recreate the alphabet
is a gateway to a child’s development, both
intellectually and emotionally. Once the alphabet
is mastered, children can move on to applying
the alphabet to both writing and reading words
and sentences. This in turn leads to a greater
knowledge and understanding of the structure and
usage of language. Simply having a working knowledge
of the alphabet when a child enters kindergarten
provides him/her with an immense advantage, as
it will facilitate a much easier introduction
to language usage as a whole.
Learning
to draw shapes (lines, circles, squares, triangles)
is a milestone of transitioning into a higher
level of cognitive development, and occurs about
the same time as fine-motor skills become more
developed. Around 4 years of age, a child enters
the Preschematic Stage of creativity and is now
able not only to draw the basic shapes, but is
also able to copy them. From a cognitive standpoint,
children are in the Preoperational Stage (identified
by famed psychologist Piaget) and are able to
understand, memorize, and use symbols as their
language development grows. Entering these stages
of creative and cognitive development provides
an ideal learning situation to introduce a child
to printing the alphabet: a child can use his/her
ability to create controlled drawings (printed
letters) with a pencil, copy images that resemble
shapes he/she is already familiar with (circles,
lines, etc.), and identify these images as letters
that lead to forming words.
Write On! uses these principles of learning in
its program to teach children to print the alphabet.
Children are given a verbal description of how
to draw each letter, and the descriptions are
based on shapes that are already very familiar.
As the verbal description is provided, so is a
visual image of how each letter is drawn. Ensuring
total access, the DVD is accompanied by the “Amazing
Writer”: a book in which children can practice
writing each letter as they hear and see how to
do it. Children are entranced by the silliness
of Professor Scribble, and enjoy learning and
practicing their printing skills in their Amazing
Writer along with Violet, guided by Amazing Bob.
The program effectively addresses all aspects
of the process of learning how to print, beginning
with the basic yet essential posture and pencil
grip for both right- and left-handed writers.
Children who use the Write on! program will easily
gain a fundamental advantage by acquiring and
practicing the skills necessary to further their
understanding and use of language.
RESOURCES:
- Research
and information on teaching printing.
- U.S.
Department of Education, information on Early
Childhood Development.
- Piaget’s
stages of cognitive development.
- Stages
of Creative Development.
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