βοΈ Dysgraphia
Dysgraphia is a learning difference that can affect handwriting, spelling, written expression, sentence structure, organization, and getting ideas onto paper. Bee LEARN focuses on building writing foundations, teaching the writing process directly, and using tools that help children show what they know.
π± Foundations
Writing starts with body control, motor planning, visual motor skills, and early letter formation. Some children need occupational therapy, handwriting instruction, or adapted writing tools before writing becomes easier.
π οΈ Skill Building
Writing skills grow when students are explicitly taught how to plan, draft, revise, edit, spell, type, and organize their ideas. Writing should be broken into smaller steps instead of treated as one huge task.
π Independence
Independence means helping the child use supports that reduce the writing barrier while still building writing skills. The goal is to help the child communicate ideas clearly, not punish them for slow or difficult handwriting.
What Does the Research Say?
Evidence informed writing support should be targeted to the childβs needs. Some children need handwriting support, some need spelling support, some need help with sentence structure and organization, and many need more than one type of support.
Helpful writing supports often include:
- Explicit instruction in the writing process: prewriting, drafting, revising, and editing
- Graphic organizers to plan ideas before writing
- Models of written work, topic sentences, and paragraph structure
- The COPS editing strategy: Capitalization, Organization, Punctuation, and Spelling
- Occupational therapy support when fine motor control affects handwriting
- Handwriting programs such as Handwriting Without Tears when appropriate
- Keyboarding instruction so typing does not become another barrier
- Cover Copy Compare for spelling practice
- Assistive technology such as speech to text, spell check, word processing, and digital worksheets
- Reduced copying, extra time, partial notes, and grading that separates content from handwriting or spelling when needed
The goal is not perfect handwriting. The goal is helping the child plan, organize, write, revise, edit, and express knowledge with the right level of support.
Dysgraphia FAQ
Is dysgraphia just messy handwriting?
No. Dysgraphia can affect handwriting, spelling, written expression, sentence structure, organization, and the ability to get ideas onto paper.
Should my child learn typing?
Yes, many students with dysgraphia benefit from explicit keyboarding instruction. Typing can help them show what they know when handwriting is slow, painful, or exhausting.
Is speech to text cheating?
No. Speech to text can be an access tool. It allows a child to express ideas while still working on writing skills separately.
Do graphic organizers really help?
Yes. Graphic organizers can reduce the planning burden by helping students organize ideas before they begin writing sentences or paragraphs.
What is the COPS strategy?
COPS is an editing checklist. It helps the student review one thing at a time: Capitalization, Organization, Punctuation, and Spelling.
When should occupational therapy be considered?
Occupational therapy may be helpful when fine motor control, hand strength, motor planning, posture, or visual motor skills are affecting handwriting.
Trusted Resources & Tools
These trusted resources can help families understand dysgraphia, support handwriting and written expression, explore accommodations, and build independence through evidence based instruction and assistive technology.
What Works Clearinghouse
Evidence based writing practice guides and instructional recommendations supported by educational research.
Visit ResourceHandwriting Without Tears
Structured handwriting and keyboarding programs widely used by occupational therapists, schools, and homeschool families.
Visit ResourceUnderstood
Parent friendly explanations of dysgraphia, accommodations, school supports, and assistive technology options.
Visit ResourceLD OnLine
Trusted articles, classroom accommodations, writing supports, and dysgraphia resources for families and educators.
Visit ResourceInternational Dyslexia Association
Research based information on dysgraphia, handwriting difficulties, written expression, accommodations, and intervention.
Visit ResourceChild Mind Institute
Expert guidance on dysgraphia, signs, accommodations, occupational therapy supports, and school strategies.
Visit Resource
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