|
Books > Children's & Educational > The arts > Art, fine art, decorative arts
The Oxford Let's Practise Handwriting series proudly introduces
learners to our fun print and cursive monsters. These friendly
monsters will support children every step of the way as they start
their handwriting journey. Every handwriting stroke is represented
by a different monster to provide clear instruction in the correct
formation of every letter of the alphabet. This will assist parents
and teachers with teaching handwriting while also keeping children
interested. This exciting new series is CAPS-aligned. It provides
an excellent opportunity for children to build a strong foundation
in developing directionality, drawing, tracing, pattern creation,
spacing familiarity and letter formation while also introducing
them to cursive writing. The engaging activities provide plenty of
practice in order to develop and strengthen fine and gross motor
skills as well as hand-eye coordination. Our brand new handwriting
font has been researched and developed by a team of local teacher s
and education experts. The unique font aims to facilitate the
process of teaching handwriting more easily. It is easy to use and
will form the foundation for future writing activities.
Eight workbooks accompanying the Stage One Animal World stories in
the Storyworlds series. They provide a record of a child's
development, and offer activities to practise reading and writing
skills, such as the consolidation of word recognition, sight
vocabulary and phonological awareness.
From the invention of the alphabet to the explosion of the
internet, Dominic Wyse takes us on a unique journey into the
process of writing. Starting with seven extraordinary examples that
serve as a backdrop to the themes explored, it pays particular
attention to key developments in the history of language, including
Aristotle's grammar through socio-cultural multimodality, to
pragmatist philosophy of communication. Analogies with music are
used as a comparator throughout the book, yielding radically new
insights into composition processes. The book presents the first
comprehensive analysis of the Paris Review interviews with the
world's greatest writers such as Louise Erdrich, Gabriel Garcia
Marquez, Ted Hughes, and Marilynne Robinson. It critically reviews
the most influential guides to styles and standards of language,
and presents new research on young people's creativity and writing.
Drawing on over twenty years of findings, Wyse presents
research-informed innovative practices to demonstrate powerfully
how writing can be learned and taught.
|
|