2. Writing in Primary 1 is much heavier
A typical P1 child may need to:
- · Copy long sentences
- · Write numbers clearly in boxes
- · Do spelling
- · Fill in worksheets
- · Complete 2–3 pages of classwork
K2 writing is mostly:
- · Short words
- · Simple strokes
- · Tracing
- · Big letters
The difference in writing stamina is huge.
3. Finemotor skills are still developing
Many K2 children:
- · Hold the pencil too tightly/too loosely
- · Press too hard on paper
- · Write slowly to maintain neatness
- · Get tired after a few lines
If their hand muscles are weak, speed becomes a challenge.
4️. Lackof time awareness
Young children don’t understand:
· What “10 minutes left” feels like
· Why they must finish now
· How to pace themselves
Most K2 children complete tasks based on interest,not timing.
2. What Happens If This Issue Is Not Fixed Early
1️. Child becomes stressed in school
When a child repeatedly cannot finish:
· Teacher comments worry them
· They feel slow compared to others
· Confidence drops
· They start to dislike school
The child begins to think:
“I cannot do it.”
2️. Homework piles up
If they don’t finish in school → they bring it home.
Parents get frustrated → Child becomes more stressed → Cycle repeats.
3️. Teacher may perceive the child as disengaged
Even if the child is smart, slow writing gives theimpression:
· Not paying attention
· Not listening
· Not trying
This affects class participation and group activities.
4️. They fall behind academically
If the child is always catching up during class, they:
· Miss important explanations
· Forget instructions
· Rush through work and make mistakes
· Lose interest in learning
5️. Long-term impact on confidence
If the child constantly feels:
“I’m slower than others”
“I always cannot finish”
They may become:
- · Afraid of challenges
- · Dependent on parents
- · Unwilling to try new tasks
This affects P2–P3 performance too.
3. How Parents Can Help Improve This within 4–6 Weeks
1. Train Pencil Control
- · Peg board activities
- · Lego building
- · Playdough shaping
- · Lacing cards
- · Scissor cutting
- · Bead threading
- · Tweezers to pick items
These improve:
· Grip
· Hand strength
· Smooth writing
· Speed
2. Build Writing Stamina
Daily 5-Minute Writing
Ask your child to write:
· Numbers 1–20
· Simple short words
· Short sentences
Do it 5 minutes a day, not 30 minutes.
Small, consistent practice builds speed naturally.
3. Time Awareness Training
Teach your child what 1 minute feels like.
Example game:
· Set timer for 1 minute
· Ask child to write numbers as far as they can
· Stop at 1 minute
· Show progress
· Celebrate improvement
This builds:
- Pace
- Awareness
- Motivation to beat their score
4. Reduce Perfection Syndrome
Many kids write slowly because they want their strokes tobe perfect.
Tell them:
Neat is good. But first focus on finishing, then decorating
Speed is also important.
Show examples of “acceptable neatness”.
5. Celebrate Every Improvement
Motivate them:
· Stickers
· 1- minute achievements
· “You wrote 3 more numbers than yesterday!”
· “You finished one page faster!”
Kids improve fast when the progress is visible.
Finishing Work on Time is a Skill, Not aTalent
And skills take time to develop, also, they are young