When we think about literacy, we usually jump straight to letters and books.
But what about everything kids need before they can read and write?
Before a child can track words on a page or hold a pencil to write, their eyes and hands need to work together. They need to recognize shapes, follow movement, and control their muscles.
The best way to help? Give them hands-on, open-ended materials that build these skills naturally.
Here are a few easy ones to add to your classroom:
1. Puzzles
- Help kids recognize shapes and patterns
- Strengthen hand-eye coordination, which is foundational for handwriting
2. Loose Parts (Think: Containers, toilet paper rolls, pieces of cardboard, etc.!)
- Encourage tracking movement, sorting, and stacking
- Improve fine motor control for writing
3. Hands-On Tools
- Clothespins, tweezers, and pom-poms—great for finger strength
- Lacing cards & pegboards—help kids focus and control hand movements
4. Building Materials
- Blocks, Legos, and empty boxes—build hand-eye coordination
- Marble runs & ramps—help kids track movement
5. Push & Pull Toys
- Cars, balls, and anything that rolls—builds visual tracking
- Helps kids understand cause and effect—an essential thinking skill for literacy
Before kids can sit and write letters, they need strong hands, eyes, and coordination to make it happen.
Instead of focusing on tracing worksheets, let’s give them more opportunities to move, build, and play.
Here's my challenge for you: Take a look around your classroom.
Are kids getting enough chances to move, explore, and use their hands? Try adding one new material and see what happens!
Let me know what you try—I’d love to hear about it!
Cheering you on,
Stacy