For Teachers

Lend a Hand with 8 Easy Handwriting Strategies

The mechanics of writing can be tough to master for students with ADHD. Here are eight good ways for teachers to offer a helping hand.

ADHD in School: Tips for Teachers on Handwriting Help
ADHD in School: Tips for Teachers on Handwriting Help

Kids who struggle with handwriting might know the subject matter; they just aren’t able to show you with paper and pencil that they do.

That’s because handwriting is a source of great frustration for many children with ADHD.

Try these strategies to help easing pencil-and-paper tasks:

  • Permit writing directly on the page or test booklet, instead of having a child copy answers onto another page or answer sheet.
  • Experiment with a variety of pencil grips to find one that is comfortable for the student’s use.

[Click to Read: Helping Students Who Struggle with Handwriting]

  • Give visual cues, such as a starting dot and numbered arrows, as a guide to form letters correctly.
  • Provide a clipboard to anchor papers.
  • Allow an upper-grade student to print instead of writing in cursive, if it is easier and faster for him.
  • Pass out photocopied pages of instructions or problems rather than requiring students to copy work from the board.
  • Allow a child to use adaptive technologies for writing, like working on a computer or a portable word processor, such as Alpha Smart, as much as possible.
  • Tape a strip or chart of alphabet letters (manuscript or cursive) on the child’s desk as a reference for letter formation. Draw directional arrows on the letters that the child finds confusing or difficult to write.

[Read This Next: “How I Trained My Brain to Unleash Wonders My Fingers Couldn’t”]

Adapted with permission from sandrarief.com, and How to Reach & Teach Children with ADD/ADHD, Second Edition, copyright 2005, and The ADD/ADHD Checklist, Second Edition, copyright 2008, by Sandra F. Rief.


SUPPORT ADDITUDE
Thank you for reading ADDitude. To support our mission of providing ADHD education and support, please consider subscribing. Your readership and support help make our content and outreach possible. Thank you.