Letter and word spacing difficulties
Children who struggle with letter and word spacing may often have poor spatial awareness skills.
For a few eye tracking skills may be an issue.
Both of these areas can be supported through games and activities.
It is always a good idea to get a child's eyes tested as sometimes it may be as simple as that.
Tips to support letter and word spacing
- Using a piece of a child’s writing talk through it together, as this may help you to better understand what it is they see. Asking the following kinds of questions and discussing the answers will help:
- Can you read this to me?
- Which letters do you think make the word/s?
- Where does one word end and another one start?
- Can you show me the line you think the word should sit on?
- Where would you start your next line of writing?
- Which letters do you think are sitting on the line correctly?
- What gap size between letters in a word looks best?
- What gap size between words in a line of writing looks best?
- An explanation of how letters sit, close together in a word, may need to be discussed with the child as they may not have understood this. It is often presumed they naturally pick up and understand this writing rule.
- Once the understanding of letter spacing in words has been taught, the larger spacing between individual words is next. Often children are told to leave a finger space between each word, this is fine when a child is small and has little fingers but is not always the case. An alternative is to provide the child with an appropriately sized flat tool which they can place on the paper at the end of a word as a guide to how much space is to be left before writing the next word. Over time they will not need the tool as they will have developed the spatial awareness skills needed to space the words correctly.
- The ideal space size between words is the size of one of their lower-case letters.
- It is also useful to talk about the blank space between lines and on the page in general. Explain that these spaces and gaps help with presentation of the work so that it can be seen and read more easily.
- The correct paper tilt can help a child who is finding it hard to start each line of writing at the margin.
- Children think that if they write on tilted paper the writing will be tilted. Ask them to write a sentence on plain paper placed straight in front of them and then the same sentence with the paper tilted. They will be amazed that the latter is straighter!
- Coloured marks in the margin can act as reminders of where to start their next line of writing.
- Seeing the writing line properly over a whole page can be difficult for some children.
- Use paper with a different colour line such as red, green, blue or yellow or even black/blue lines on coloured paper.
- Paper with raised lines may help others as they feel the slight raise in the paper as they write, guiding them as to the position of the line.
- Coloured line grids and picture clues can help children learn to position letters correctly on the line and in relation to each other.
It may help to have some other examples of writing (even some you have done yourself) so that different gap and spacing sizes can be compared. Ask the child to pick the piece of writing they think looks best and seems easier to read.
What they see and understand may be very different to what you are seeing and thought they understood.