When to Teach Your Kids How to Write Chinese Characters? 8 Fun Pre-Writing Chinese Activities for Young Children

Writing is a combination of various abilities of the body, mind, eyes, and brain. If you are unsure whether your child is ready to start writing Chinese characters, this checklist is your new best friend:

  1. Core Muscle Strength: Does my child have core muscle strength to maintain the correct sitting posture?

  2. Proximal Stability: Does my child have stable upper limbs? Without this stability, children are likely to have shaky handwriting and shrugged shoulders.

  3. Arm Strength & Wrist Stability: Can my child lift objects with one hand?

  4. Finger Strength & Pincer Grasp: Can my child hold the pen with a tripod grasp – using the tips of the thumb and index finger, with the pen resting on the middle finger?

  5. In-Hand Manipulation: Does my child have the ability to manipulate small objects flexibly? For example, opening and closing marker caps.

  6. Eye-Hand Coordination & Visual Memory Skills: Can my child accurately copy the characters s/he sees?

  7. Concentration Skills: Can my child focus on a task without an adult nearby?

  8. Visual Perception: Can my child distinguish between similar characters or letters? For example, "上" and "下", "b" and "d", "p" and "q".

If you answered "No" to most of these questions, it might be best to wait a little longer. However, this doesn’t mean you shouldn’t introduce Chinese characters to your young children. There are many fun and effective pre-writing activities that can help develop the necessary skills.

 

Here are some of my favorite pre-writing exercises to get your child started with learning Chinese characters. These pre-writing activities are designed to engage your young Chinese learners and enhance core muscle strength, hand-eye coordination, and fine motor skills, setting a strong foundation for future writing success.

Chinese Characters Pre-Writing Activities for Young Children

  1. Rubber Band Characters: Children use rubber bands to break down Chinese character strokes and create each stroke using different colored rubber bands.

  2. Sand Characters: Children use their fingers to write characters on sand. This fun sensory activity allows them to practice a character repeatedly.

  3. Water Characters: Children dip their fingers in water to write characters, experiencing the joy of calligraphy. Your advanced Chinese learners can use a brush for more detailed practice.

  4. LEGO Characters: LEGO is excellent for developing fine motor skills. Children enjoy playing with LEGO and can use their creativity to build Chinese characters.

  5. Clay Characters: Children make Chinese characters using clay or playdough. They use different colors to identify the Chinese radicals.

  6. Zhuyin/Character Matching: Children use tweezers to pick up beads and match the zhuyin fuhao (bopomopo) on their paper! As they learn more characters, I include simple characters on the white beads and matching sheets.

  7. Character Puzzles: One of my students' favorite center activities! I print Chinese characters as puzzles, and the children cut them out and piece them back together to form words.

  8. Stroke Trace and Write: Children trace the strokes (which have a rough texture) with their fingers, starting from the red dot and following the arrows. Then, they use dry erase markers to practice writing the strokes on a whiteboard.

 

Some friendly reminders:

Your child's fine motor skills will improve as they grow. Before they are ready to use a thin pencil to write some Chinese characters, they can start with other writing tools. The progression should be: finger, chunky crayons/chalk, chunky colored pencils, colored pencils, and finally pencils.

 

Book Recommendation:

《給幼兒準備一雙寫字的手》

The author is an advocate of Montessori education and believes that a child’s training needs to be gradual. Before learning to write, children need to enhance their hand control, hand-eye coordination, and body balance to prepare their hands to be stable and flexible.

Looking for more ideas on Chinese character learning activities for young children? Check out our new post - 15 Fun and Interactive Ways for Kids to Learn Chinese Characters!

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Best Chinese Character Writing Practice Worksheets for Beginners