Ways to Encourage Your Child to Write Well

Let Them Be Articulate!

Dan Reveal
Just as being a good listener is a way to win friends and influence people, good writing and communication skills can pave the way for a child's successful transition into adulthood.

Everyone seems to respect a person who can be articulate, and encouraging your child to write well can set the favorable stage for this ability at an early age. What, then, are ways to encourage your child to write well?

Focus on the Words

As you encourage your child to write well, you will want to begin with a simple focus on words. Just as your child first used the word "strawberry," for example, they can amass many thousands of words over time.

Perhaps children learn new words easily because it offers them a sense of accomplishment. Progress leads to enthusiasm, and you can use their basic enthusiasm for words to encourage your child to write well.

Make Time for Reading

Another way to encourage your child to write well is to make time for reading. Reading goes beyond merely being able to recognize new words because it places words into a reasonable context where tone of voice and other factors bring the story to life.

As you encourage your child to write well by reading stories out loud, you can point out both the practical and emotional appeal of words. Writing well is a product of good grammar and good emotional descriptions.

Make Time to Practice

Your child will eventually find his or her own writing style. They will decide whether they are going to write fact or fiction. They will receive the social benefits from writing well.

In order for all this to happen, however, you are going to have to encourage your child to write well by giving them time to practice. Reading and writing go hand in hand, and you can create a good environment for both by providing your child with pens and paper and plenty of quiet time to reflect on the words they are stringing together.

Make it Fun

Lastly, you can encourage your child to write well by making it fun. When you brag to your friends about how well your child writes, won't good things come from this? Children don't have to be experts at research papers in order to write well.

In sum, the ability to write well is a quality that others respect. You can encourage your child to write well by pointing them in the right direction and then leaving the room so they can be lost in the world of words.

Published by Dan Reveal

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10 Comments

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  • Sandy James11/23/2011

    Wonderful article. Happy Thanksgiving, Dan!

  • Delicia Powers11/14/2011

    Very helpful, thanks!

  • Mike Powers11/6/2011

    Outstanding advice, thanks!

  • Sunshine Wilson11/4/2011

    Great tips

  • Carol Roach11/4/2011

    great points

  • Dina Montgomery11/4/2011

    Great one Dan. One thing I'm extremely proud of my son is that he pronounces all his words when he reads...... :o)

  • Jack Wellman11/4/2011

    Hey, this is going to help me too my friend. Outstanding work as always.

  • leroy coffie11/4/2011

    excellent

  • Michele Starkey11/4/2011

    How blessed I was, Blessed in deed - for I had a mother who taught me to read! (and write :) cheers, my friend!

  • Cathy A Montville11/4/2011

    Encouraging tips, Dan! :)

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