Cursive Writing Ages 4-5: Ideal for home learning (Collins Easy Learning Preschool)
£2.80£3.80 (-26%)
Level: EYFS
Subject: English
An engaging activity book to really help boost your child’s progress at every stage of their learning!
Fully in line with the Early Years curriculum, this book provides an introduction to cursive writing, helping you to support your child’s learning at home.
By working through the activities your child will learn how to write individual letters in cursive form to help prepare them for joined-up writing.
Included in this book:
- fun tracing and copying activities that enable children to practise their handwriting
- certificate to reward learning
- helpful tips for parents
Read more
Additional information
Publisher | Collins (7 Mar. 2022) |
---|---|
Language | English |
Paperback | 24 pages |
ISBN-10 | 0008275343 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0008275341 |
Reading age | 4 – 5 years, from customers |
by Kate M.
Handy for my 5 year old doing a bit more practicing on her letters
by Amazon Customer
Good practice book for cursive, hard to come by for children who learn cursive in school. Just wish the letters to practice were bit bigger, especially for children who are just developing writing skills.
by Amazon Customer
Useful tool to help writing skills
by J.Coll
Not sure if anyone writes a letter ‘f’ like the way it’s shown it this book! But otherwise good book. Once the pages are full we’ve been copying the letters on to plain paper
by Iryna Zaporozhets
Good
by Galactic Supreme Commander
Haven’t used yet but the content looks good
by HTog
We teach cursive in our school- it is very difficult to find resources to direct parents to and although Twinkl is great, it is nice to have a book to hand. There are red dots to show where to start the letters, but then not much guidance on how to form the letter from there- so unless you are sat with someone that knows, the child could just be blindly going over the lines or at worst, being taught wrong, and then would need to be ‘retaught’.
The book also sets the letters in a strange order. You would think nowadays book publishers would know that letters are not taught from a-z, but mainly taught using the letters and sounds programme- ie, s, a, t, p, i, n first etc. You would think they would then publish books introducing letters in that order- but alas no. Nice to have a cursive book for a change but you simply cannot replace the ‘teaching’ input.
by Maria Brinzanescu
I’m very happy