Download: Tools to help with handwriting

By Amanda Morin

Expert reviewed by Keri Wilmot

The SpacekidPDF

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Bold Line PaperPDF

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Shapes and Mazes for TracingPDF

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Does your child have messy handwriting? These tools can help kids develop the skills needed for writing by hand (called fine motor skills).

  • If your child doesn’t leave enough space in between words when writing, try the “spacekid.”
  • Bold line paper can help your child practice staying in the lines. Remind your child that smaller letters, like the lowercase c, or the loop of a b, should fit between the bottom and middle lines.
  • Textured line paper can give your child even more support. To make it, print out the bold line paper. Then trace the top and bottom lines on the paper with fabric paint or glue. Once it dries, your child’s pencil will “bump” into the lines during writing.
  • Tracing shapes and maze-like paths can help your child build fine motor skills. Print out these sheets to give your child practice. You can use them over and over if you put the printed pages in plastic page protectors and use a dry-erase marker to trace.

You can also reach out to your child’s school for more ideas on how to help your child with handwriting.

Key takeaways

About the author

About the author

Amanda Morin is the author of “The Everything Parent’s Guide to Special Education” and the former director of thought leadership at Understood. As an expert and writer, she helped build Understood from its earliest days. 

Reviewed by

Reviewed by

Keri Wilmot has worked with children, teens, and young adults for more than 20 years in a wide range of pediatric settings. Her teenage son has been diagnosed with ADHD.

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