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Got a kid learning letters and numbers? Handwriting Without Tears, a system used in schools around the country, has come up with an app that can make things a lot easier.
Handwriting Without Tears is a curriculum that draws from innovation and research to provide developmentally appropriate, multisensory tools and strategies for classrooms.
Handwriting Without Tears Spokesperson Suzanne Baruch Asherson joined us live to demonstrate a simple and efficient way to learn cursive. Los Angeles teachers, therapists and parents will gather on… ...
Every Monday we would crack the spine of our “Handwriting Without Tears” workbooks, an artifact of early 2000s elementary school curriculum, a time when public schools could still afford such luxuries ...
Handwriting Without Tears was developed by an occupational therapist named Jan Olzen.
The computer keyboard helped kill shorthand, and now it's threatening to finish off longhand. When handwritten essays were introduced on the SAT exams for the class of 2006, just 15 percent of the ...
Handwriting no longer is required in Common Core education standards, but California, fortunately, is a leader in appreciating its importance.
Handwriting Without Tears was implemented in preschool, junior kindergarten and kindergarten classes at the Early Childhood Center after more than 20 years of a previous program.
Walsh’s school uses the Fundations literacy program, which includes handwriting lessons, in addition to supplemental lessons by Handwriting Without Tears.
Suzanne Baruch Asherson is a occupational therapist at the Beverly Hills Unified School District in California and a national presenter for Handwriting Without Tears, an early childhood education ...
Emily Knapton, director of program development at Handwriting Without Tears, believes that "when kids struggle with handwriting, it filters into all their academics.