Discuss in brief about techniques of strokes
and curves used to teach capital and small
letters: cursive and print scripts to students
Answers
Answer:
D'Nealian, sometimes misspelled Denealian, is a style of writing and teaching cursive and manuscript ("print" and "block") handwriting for English. ... D'Nealian was developed by Donald Thurber while teaching in a primary school, and was first introduced in 1978.
Answer:
All drawing and handwriting is produced by a series of strokes that form curved and straight lines in different directions, which are linked together to form patterns, shapes, letters and numbers.
Learning to handwrite is a matter of building a library of motor plans for the different combinations of strokes that are used for producing letters and numbers, so that a letter, or series of letters to be preplanned and produced without need for visual guidance. An important aspect of this learning is the increasingly strong and automatic association between the sound of the letter (phoneme), the shape of the letter (grapheme) and the motor plan for the letter.
Learning the motor plan for the letter occurs when the child is first given the opportunity to practice forming letters using smoothly executed movement which are not constrained by accuracy demands. Once the motor plan is well established and the child is able to link the strokes to form letters in a smooth manner without the need for visual guidance, attention can be given to writing accurately between lines.
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