My son’s handwriting is exactly like this. He has dysgraphia. Getting him diagnosed was a game changer in school, as he was able to get allowances like having a portable word processor (in lower school, laptop in high school) and extra time for written assignments, also teachers had to stop grading down and bullying him for his poor handwriting – all the way through college!
Kid gets an A* for honesty.
My son’s handwriting is exactly like this. He has dysgraphia. Getting him diagnosed was a game changer in school, as he was able to get allowances like having a portable word processor (in lower school, laptop in high school) and extra time for written assignments, also teachers had to stop grading down and bullying him for his poor handwriting – all the way through college!
Crazy how often people never practice and reach adulthood with that kind of handwriting.
Plot twist, the kid is 17.
It did improve though
Future Congressman.
I can still read it
Let’s hope that kid is like 5 years old.
My kindergarten teacher told me the tails on my lower case a’s were too long. Shortened ’em up.
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Then she told me they were too short. Made ’em longer.
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Then she told me I wasn’t pronouncing her name correctly. It’s Mrs. CanDOW, not CanDOH. Ok, cool. Thanks Mrs. CanDOW.
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Then she told me it was pronounced CanDOH.
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I checked out after that. Y’know, as much as a five year old could.
He must be a child of the quarantine generation. They will all share this.