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Found 22 results

  1. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Jack is in Year 6 (age 10-11). His handwriting matches the model quite well, but you will see that it looks as though it has been ‘drawn’ fairly slowly and deliberately. Some of the pupils in Year 5 are already much more confident and more fluid in their handwriting than is Jack. Which is entirely normal! Children develop different motor skills/cognitive skills at different rates! Any given child will progress rapidly at some times, and make only very slow progress at others. Our individual genomes, diets, family circumstances, and the times/intensities with which we suffer illnesses all vary, and each one of these things impacts upon our development. You can be a ‘whizz-kid’ in one term, and a real ‘slow coach’ in the next. Some kids zoom ahead but ‘plateau’ early; others start slow but become sudden ‘late bloomers’. Others develop at a fairly constant rate - but those rates ARE ALL DIFFERENT. Kids can be brilliant at e.g. maths and terrible at languages, or the other way around, or good at only one thing, bad at only one thing, etc. ’One Size’ most definitely DOESN’T ‘fit all’! THIS is why we train people for several years BEFORE we let them teach in our schools. Do you remember how ‘easy’ it was trying to home-school your own child/children during the Covid pandemic lockdown(s)? Now imagine trying to teach several different sets of groups of thirty+ of Other People’s children; children that you don’t love unconditionally! Now imagine trying to do that day, every day, for the whole of your working life.

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  2. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Scarlett’s handwriting has been declared the ‘Winner’ for Year 6 (age 10-11). It is clear and confident, and it has some slight variations from the handwriting model that she was taught. I can’t help noticing that her handwriting is largely ‘printed’, rather than being ‘joined-up’, or ‘cursive’. But does this matter?

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  3. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Matilda’s handwriting has been awarded the ‘Runner-up’ for Year 6 (age 10-11). Notice how confident and fluid it is, and how her writing has developed with slight variations from the model.

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  4. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Kacie has been awarded the ‘Runner-up’ prize for Year 5 (age 9-10). This writing is very upright, and very close to the handwriting model that is being taught. Complete with its glyphs for ‘f’ that look like a mangled ‘g’ or ‘y’.

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  5. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Daniel is in Year 5 (age 9-10). His handwriting has been ‘Highly Commended’. It is a close match to the handwriting model that is being taught in the schools in my area.

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  6. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    This Bertie (the second person of that name whose writing I have photographed) is in Year 5 (age 9-10). His handwriting is a very close match to the model that he has been taught, and it has been ‘Highly Commended’.

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  7. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Amelia is in Year 5 (age 9-10). Her handwriting also deviates slightly from the ‘loopiness’ and the joins of the model that she has been taught. But it is perfectly legible and I like it. Good for her!

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  8. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Bertie is in Year 5 (age 9-10). In this area, this school year is the first one that one spends at ‘Middle School’ (ages 9-13). Middle Schools are, in my opinion, an eminently sensible idea. I don’t think it’s a good idea to try to teach 11-year-olds in the same schools as 16 year old boys and girls. But many of the school districts in this country do house kids in one school from ages 4-11, and then another school from ages 11-18. So maybe I’m wrong. I wanted to show Bertie’s handwriting because it is quite different to the model that he has been taught. Although he does write the model’s flattened-‘f’, he writes his glyphs with very tall ascenders. I am happy to see that ‘deviation’ of this kind is no longer met with a rap across the knuckles with a ruler (or worse).

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  9. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Brooklyn-Jane is in Year 4 (age 8-9). Her handwriting was ‘Highly Commended’. I like that fact that her glyph for ‘f’ is more like a printed ‘f’ than is the one prescribed by the handwriting model. I wonder whether this adaptation of that glyph was her teacher’s idea, or if Brooklyn-Jane adapted it herself. I ought to go back to the display, and check to see whether or not everyone in this school uses this ‘f’, or if it is only Brooklyn-Jane.

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  10. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Ivy is in Year 4 (age 8-9). I note that her handwriting has rather tall ascenders, and that she is not writing the strange glyph for ‘f’, which reminds me at least of a malformed ‘g’.

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  11. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Jack’s school has already got its Year 3 (age 7-8) kids using the handwriting model that imposes a glyph for minuscule ‘f’ that doesn’t have an ascender. His handwriting was awarded the accolade for ‘Best in Year 3’ among the schools in my area that took part in the competition.

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  12. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Emma is in Year 3 (age 7-8). Her school has not yet introduced the handwriting model with the minuscule ‘f’ with no apparent ascender. Which is a decision that I applaud! The glyph in question looks decidedly weird to my eyes, not least because I can not bring to my mind any printed typeface in any book or magazine or on any sign that I have ever seen in which the glyph for minuscule ‘f’ doesn’t have one. Stupid!

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  13. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Skyler, like Rosie, is already writing in ‘joined-up handwriting’ in Year 2 (age 6-7). My own age cohort was not introduced to this idea until the end of Year 4. Maybe it was just because I was/we were taught in a two-room school in a small village? Had our peers from the town been writing ‘joined-up’ for two years longer than we had? I don’t think so, but I dunno 🤷‍♂️

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  14. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Rosie’s school has already - in Year 2 (age 6-7) - got her joining her letters to make cursive! 😮 My own first encounter with cursive was not until the very end of Year 4! To be fair, back when I was at First School, much of the teaching effort in the earlier years had been concentrated on trying to wean us kids off the traditional Stone technology, and on to that newfangled ‘Bronze’ stuff… 😉

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  15. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    Emilia in Year 2 (age 6-7) is still writing with the basic ‘ball-&-stick’ alphabet.

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  16. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    I took this photograph in a supermarket in the nearest town to me. The supermarket currently has a display of entries from our local schools’ handwriting competition for 2024, which was organised by the local Rotary Club. This is of the handwriting of Olivia in Year 1 (age 5-6). She has been taught to write a basic ‘ball and stick’ alphabet.

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  17. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    This is a photo of the handwriting sample of ‘Ella’ in Year 6, which was submitted to a 2023 competition for the handwriting of children in my local schools. The competition was organised by my local Rotary Club.

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  18. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    This is a photo of the handwriting sample of ‘Elsie’ in Year 6, which was submitted to a 2023 competition for the handwriting of children in my local schools. The competition was organised by my local Rotary Club.

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  19. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    This is a photo of the handwriting sample of ‘Caitlin’ in Year 5, which was submitted to a 2023 competition for the handwriting of children in my local schools. The competition was organised by my local Rotary Club.

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  20. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    This is a photo of the handwriting sample of ‘Elizabeth’ in Year 5, which was submitted to a 2023 competition for the handwriting of children in my local schools. The competition was organised by my local Rotary Club.

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  21. From the album: Handwriting Competition 2023 for Schools local to Mercian

    This is a photo of the handwriting sample of ‘Olivia’ in Year 4 which was submitted to a 2023 competition for the handwriting of children in my local schools. The competition was organised by my local Rotary Club.

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  22. Hello everyone. In the past I had made a publication that was to make a decision to get my first vintage flexible fountain pen and finally I could own one of these beauties.It is a moore safety pen in black hard rubber with a very good ink capacity since this is a long but slender pen.The pen feels quite comfortable and light in my hand is a pretty beautiful pen that always impresses people when they see a retractable nib of my moore.The 14k gold nib is small but has a good flexibility as the seller told me on his website that he lists it as a nib superflex. The 14k nib is an extra fine point when used without any pressure and not a single stroke has failed me and we add that to be an extra fine nib it is quite smooth. When I write cursive with the flexibility of this nib it is quite satisfactory and does not tire me and they offer me a beautiful line variation without the need to put a lot of pressure. I also want to comment on you that the nib is something dry but without being annoying (I mean feeling scratchy or skipping strokes) and even in rhodia paper using flex it dries almost instantly without fear of accidentally stains on your sheet or In hands, it may be that the somewhat dry sensation is due to the pilot blue-black ink that I use since it has some time that the lid broke and I stuck it with adhesive tape and this may be somewhat thicker by evaporation.And what is most impressive about this great fountain pen is that it has never shown railroading when I use it in flexible mode :notworthy1:and I don't have to be dipping it in the inkwell at all times as with my dip pens. Although we cannot deny that the dip thought of what I have managed to see in the hands of a calligraphy expert they can create an extremely beautiful calligraphy. Although I personally have bad luck in finding a good combination of dip nib and ink XD and it is somewhat complicated to get ink at a good price in my country. Unfortunately I don't think I have time to improve my handwriting for an approximate six months since I find myself doing my professional practices at the university to be a lawyer. I attach my results with dip pen:FP FLEX NIB AND DIP FLEX NIBS IT IS VERY ENJOYABLEI became addicted to flex nibs!





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