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Handwriting Readiness: Is Your Child Ready to Write?

Handwriting readiness involves far more than knowing the alphabet. Discover the key pre-writing skills, readiness checklist, and how to support your child before school.

What Is Handwriting Readiness?

Handwriting readiness refers to the set of skills a child needs before they can learn to write letters effectively. Many parents focus on whether their child knows their letters or can hold a pencil. But true handwriting readiness is much broader than that.

A child who is pushed to write before they have the foundational skills in place will often develop compensatory habits — awkward grips, poor posture, or inefficient letter formation — that can be very hard to change later. Getting the foundations right first always pays off.

The Building Blocks of Handwriting

Handwriting is a complex skill. It draws on many different developmental areas working together:

  • Core stability — the ability to sit upright at a desk without slumping or using the table for support
  • Shoulder stability — a stable shoulder provides the foundation for controlled arm and hand movement
  • Fine motor skills — hand strength, dexterity, and finger coordination
  • Bilateral coordination — using both hands together, such as one hand holding the paper while the other writes
  • Hand dominance — a consistent preferred hand, which typically establishes by age four to five
  • Visual-motor integration — the ability to copy and reproduce shapes and patterns accurately
  • Visual perception — recognising and discriminating between shapes, letters, and spatial relationships
  • Pre-writing shapes — the ability to draw the basic lines and shapes that make up letters

Pre-Writing Shapes: The Foundation of Letters

Before a child can write letters, they need to master the pre-writing strokes that letters are made of. These develop in a predictable sequence:

  • Vertical line — typically mastered around age 2–2.5
  • Horizontal line — around age 2.5–3
  • Circle — around age 3
  • Cross (+) — around age 3.5
  • Square — around age 4
  • Diagonal lines (/\) — around age 4–4.5
  • Triangle — around age 5

If a child cannot copy these shapes reliably, they are not yet ready to form letters accurately. Working on these shapes first is always more productive than jumping straight to letters.

Handwriting Readiness Checklist

Before starting formal handwriting practice, most children should be able to:

  • Sit upright at a table for at least 10–15 minutes without significant support
  • Show a consistent hand preference
  • Copy all basic pre-writing shapes
  • Hold a pencil or crayon with a three-finger grip (even if not yet fully dynamic)
  • Colour within a simple shape without going significantly outside the lines
  • Cut along a straight line with scissors
  • Draw a recognisable person
  • Track a moving object with their eyes smoothly

If several items on this list are not yet in place, focusing on these foundational skills is the most effective preparation for handwriting.

Activities to Build Handwriting Readiness

For Core and Shoulder Stability

  • Wheelbarrow walking (walking on hands while an adult holds legs)
  • Animal walks — bear walks, crab walks, frog jumps
  • Drawing and painting on vertical surfaces — a chalkboard, easel, or paper taped to the wall
  • Carrying weighted items — a backpack, a shopping bag

For Fine Motor Preparation

  • Playdough manipulation — rolling, squeezing, pinching
  • Threading beads or pasta onto string
  • Tearing, crumpling, and folding paper
  • Using pegs, tweezers, or tongs to pick up small objects

For Visual-Motor Skills

  • Dot-to-dot activities
  • Mazes
  • Copying simple patterns on grid paper
  • Completing simple puzzles

For Pre-Writing Shapes

  • Tracing lines in sand, shaving foam, or finger paint
  • Following dotted lines with a crayon
  • Drawing roads for toy cars using pre-writing strokes
  • Simple stencil activities

What About Malta’s School System?

In Malta, children typically begin Year 1 at around age five. Formal handwriting instruction begins in the first years of primary school. Investing in pre-writing readiness activities in the year before school starts — in kindergarten (KG) — makes the transition to formal writing much smoother.

If a child starts school and immediately begins to struggle with writing, early OT assessment can identify whether there is a foundational skill gap that needs addressing. Catching this early — in the first year of school — leads to much better outcomes than waiting.

When to Seek OT Support

Consider an occupational therapy assessment if your child:

  • Is approaching school age and cannot yet copy basic shapes
  • Has not established a preferred hand by age five
  • Avoids drawing or craft activities
  • Is in school and struggling with handwriting despite regular practice
  • Complains of hand or arm pain when writing

If you’re concerned about your child’s development, contact us at +356 99872936 or visit wonderkids.mt to book an assessment.