Writing & Reading (3-4 Year’s )

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Writing & Reading
Keep your kids reading with our guide to great book lists, book-related articles, and … The years between ages 3 and 5 are critical to reading growth, and some … Your child will write letters backwards, spell seemingly randomly, and may hold.A child begins to develop a fascination with the attempt to produce letters and/or numbers with pens or pencils during his early and this sensitive period is referred as wrinting.It’s exciting when your child’s scribbles begin to look more like real letters. Some threes even start writing their name, or a few letters of it. …
Walk up and down stairs, alternating feet — one foot per step.
- Kick, throw, and catch a ball.
- Climb well.
- Run more confidently and ride a tricycle.
- Hop and stand on one foot for up to five seconds.
- Walk forward and backward easily.
- Bend over without falling
Regardless of where your child is on the spectrum, encourage his writing by keeping paper, fat pencils, fat crayons, and chalk within easy reach.A: Most children learn to recognize letters between ages 3 and 4. Typically, children will recognize the letters in their name first. By age 5, most kinder arteners begin to make sound-letter associations, such as knowing that “book” starts with the letter B. Q: How old should a child be when he or she learns to read.Gross motor skills:
Most 3–year-olds are able to walk a line, balance on a low balance beam, skip or gallop, and walk backward. They can usually pedal a tricycle, catch a large ball, and jump with two feet.Most children begin recognizing some letters between the ages of 2 and 3 and can identify most letters between 4 and 5. This means that you can start teaching your child the alphabet when he’s around 2 — but don’t expect full mastery for some time.It’s perfectly normal for children around age 3 to speak in choppy, labored language. But somewhere between age 3 and 4, your child’s thoughts should start to flow in more complete sentences with far less effort than she needed when she just turned 3.


- Read Up. Regular reading is a stepping stone to better writing and helps kids’ strengthen their writing skills. …
- Make it Fun! …
- Create Writing Worksheets. …
- Try Different Materials. …
- Write Letters. …
- Encourage Journalling. …
- Create a Writing Space. …
- Invest Time.
