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Penmanship to Praise

This morning I received an email from a woman asking for info about Penmanship to Praise. I thought I’d share some of my response here. Penmanship to Praise (or P2P, as we like to call it) is a penmanship program written by Becky Avery, the author of The Weaver Curriculum. Within each book you’ll find colored cardstock with both cursive and italic alphabets. (Although I’ve never seen the A Beka or BJU programs, I’m told that the cursive and italics in P2P are not quite the same–seems no two companies are alike when it comes to how to form letters.) The younger levels also have a page that is block-style, and the older levels have a page that compares the three styles. I tend to teach cursive myself, and have been known to ‘change’ a letter or two if I don’t like how it looks on the chart. You need to choose the level based on the size of the lines that are comfortable for your child. I started my then-1st-grade son on level 1 last year and after about a month I moved him up to level 2 because the lines were too far apart and he was writing sloppy. P2P is set up in three sections: Memory Verse Choices, Practice for Praise, and Border Sheets. The Memory Verse Choices section is co-ordinated with the Weaver volumes, with all the memory verses for each volume listed by chapter. This is the only program within the Weaver Curriculum that has the Bible verses printed out (New American Standard), but it is just as easy to use your own choice of translations. The verses are merely type-written, not done in cursive or italics. The child is expected to “translate” the verse to the proper form on their sheet. The Practice for Praise section gives suggestions for letters to focus on each week, and then provides four days’ worth of practice sheets (Mon-Thur). The Border Sheets are for Friday, when the student writes the week’s verse in their best penmanship. There are detailed instructions at the front of the book that explain how to use the program, but as with any curriculum you are free to adapt it since you are the teacher. ;-) You can get a free sample of the program from AOP if you call them. They’ll send you sample sheets from each level so you can see the various line widths. Again, this is very important for placing your child in the correct level.

2 Responses to “Penmanship to Praise”

  1. KateGladstone says:

    As you say, letter formations differ from publisher to publisher. Given that, why are the letter forms given for Italic in “Penmanship to Praise” so extremely different from the letter forms used for Italic in other curricula? The differences are not only in degree of ornamentation — they are very basic differences in the kind of letter form itself.

  2. KellyH says:

    Kate,

    I’m sorry I can’t answer that as I do not know where the author obtained her fonts. I do know, however, that the fonts are different from when I was in school, being taught to write cursive–that was a LONG time ago. :-)

    If you have a teachers’ supply store in your area, you can pick up a chart showing the font you prefer to use and substitute that into the rest of the program. The daily practice sheets, coordinating Bible verses, and border sheets can be used with any form of font. Having the lessons “all planned out” will help keep the student on-track and give the teacher (mom) one less thing to have to plan.

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