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Writer's pictureKaren Fried

Dysgraphia: Difficulty Writing

Updated: Jul 30


Student Writing

Dysgraphia refers to difficulty writing. Most people with dysgraphia have a hard time holding a pencil or pen. The awkward pencil grip can make forming letters on a page challenging. When a student with dysgraphia is asked to copy from the board, line up math problems, or write an essay he is at a real disadvantage compared to his peers who can easily write down information on a page.


Many parents and teachers don’t realize that dysgraphia is a learning disability that does not get better as the student gets older. Here are some of the signs to watch for:

  1. Awkward pencil grip

  2. Messy writing

  3. Letter size is inconsistent

  4. Presses hard on paper

  5. Spacing is inconsistent

  6. Letters are not anchored on the line

  7. Tires easily

  8. Omits words in sentence

  9. Has trouble keeping track of an idea while writing

  10. A large gap exists between verbal ability to communicate and written ability to communicate.


What can be done to help a dysgraphic student?

Build fine motor skills for writing

  1. The amount of effort it takes students to write makes the whole writing process laborious. The frustrating part for the students is that they have the ideas but it’s too much work to communicate them

  2. I recommend the Retrain the Brain program along with Handwriting Without Tears.

  3. An occupational therapist has additional tools that can be used to build the hand muscles needed for fluent writing.

  4. Vision Therapy, if visual tracking is an issue.


Organize language and writing skills.


  1. Educational specialists or tutors can help with this

  2. The writing skills that a student with this profile needs to learn includes: pre-writing skills to help him organize his ideas before he writes and editing skills.

  3. Use Speech to Text software like Dragon


Use mind maps or advanced organizers

  1. Graphic organizers are great tools. In other words, we want to take the grand ideas that the student has and get them onto paper. This process alone will alleviate a lot of stress on the student.

  2. Once the ideas are on paper, they can be numbered in the order the student wants to present them in his final paper.



Here is a great video that explains dysgraphia


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