Your child has
been learning to write since he could hold a crayon. Below are the developmental stages of writing your child will go
through. It is meant to give you an
idea of where your child is in writing development. Watch this year as your child progresses through the stages. Every child progresses at a different rate,
so your child may not be at the same level as others.
Scribbling. Scribbling looks like
random assortment of marks on a child's paper. Sometimes the marks are large,
circular, and random, and resemble drawing. Although the marks do not resemble
print, they are significant because the young writer uses them to show ideas.

Letter-like
Symbols.
Letter-like forms emerge, sometimes randomly placed, and are interspersed with
numbers. The children can tell about their own drawings or writings. In this
stage, spacing is rarely present.
Strings of
Letters.
In the strings-of-letters phase, students write some legible letters that tell
us they know more about writing. Students are developing awareness of the
sound-to-symbol relationship, although they are not matching most sounds.
Students usually write in capital letters and have not yet begun spacing. Beginning
Sounds Emerge.
At this stage, students begin to see the differences between a letter and a
word, but they may not use spacing between words. Their message makes sense and
matches the picture, especially when they choose the topic. Consonants Represent
Words. Students
begin to leave spaces between their words and may often mix upper- and
lowercase letters in their writing. They begin using punctuation and usually
write sentences that tell ideas.
Initial,
Middle, and Final Sounds. Students in this phase may spell correctly some sight words,
siblings' names, and environmental print, but other words are spelled the way
they sounds. Children easily hear sounds in words, and their writing is very
readable. Transitional
Phases.
This writing is readable and approaches conventional spelling. The students'
writing is interspersed with words that are in standard form and have standard
letter patterns. Standard Spelling. Students in this phase
can spell most words correctly and are developing an understanding of root
words, compound words, and contractions. This understanding helps students
spell similar words. Writing is a
process that flows gradually. As you give your children time to explore and
experiment with writing, you will begin to see evidence of growth. Since
writing is a process and stages are connected, your child may show evidence of
more than one stage in a single piece of writing. These
Developmental Stages of Writing are based on the work of Richard Gentry. 





