How Parents Can Help Students Write Well
Pointers for Parents

Home

Why Is Writing So Important? | Things to Know | Pointers for Parents | Things to Do | Back to English/Spelling Assignments

 

Pointers for Parents

 

In helping your child to learn to write well, remember that your goal is to make writing easier

 

Provide a place. It's important for a child to have a good place to write--a desk or table with a smooth, flat surface and good lighting.

 

Have the materials. Provide plenty of paper--lined and unlined--and things to write with, including pencils, pens, and crayons.

 

Allow time. Help your child spend time thinking about a writing project or exercise. Good writers do a great deal of thinking. Your child may dawdle, sharpen a pencil, get papers ready, or look up the spelling of a word. Be patient--your child may be thinking.

 

Respond. Do respond to the ideas your child expresses verbally or in writing. Make it clear that you are interested in the true function of writing which is to convey ideas. This means focusing on "what" the child has written, not "how" it was written. It's usually wise to ignore minor errors, particularly at the stage when your child is just getting ideas together.

 

Don't you write it! Don't write a paper for your child that will be turned in as his/her work. Never rewrite a child's work. Meeting a writing deadline, taking responsibility for the finished product, and feeling ownership of it are important parts of writing well.

 

Praise. Take a positive approach and say something good about your child's writing. Is it accurate? Descriptive? Thoughtful? Interesting? Does it say something?

and more enjoyable.