I don't have a lot of experience with a specific writing curriculum, but I have acquired a lot of knowledge though observation, conferences, college classes, and reading. I was very fortunate to have a really good language arts teacher in college. She showed us how important real literature and writing go hand in hand to teach children to read and write. Before a child is ready to write, Handwriting Without Tears , has shown that children progress in markings in a certain order. First, side to side, then up and down, then a cross, then a circle, then a square, then a triangle. This just states that diagonal writing is the hardest for little hands to make. So, don't start writing with letter A. When children start to assign meaning to their marks, then starts the real writing. I found this very neat worksheet somewhere and thought it was a good description for parents to look at. I hang it up...
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