Practice neat, legible handwriting by copying sentences, designing a handwriting entry, and comparing results in a friendly contest judged for clarity and style.



Step-by-step guide to run a Best Handwriting Contest
Step 1
Gather all Materials Needed and bring them to a flat table or desk.
Step 2
Sit up straight and place your paper so your hand can move freely.
Step 3
Do five warm-up strokes on scrap paper such as big loops straight lines and zigzags to loosen your hand.
Step 4
Pick three short sentences to copy that include lots of different letters for practice.
Step 5
On lined paper copy the first sentence slowly making each letter clear and even.
Step 6
Copy the second and third sentences on the same page trying to improve your spacing and neatness with each copy.
Step 7
Look over your practice lines and circle the single best line you like the most.
Step 8
Use the ruler to draw light margins on a clean piece of plain paper to make your official entry space.
Step 9
Carefully write your chosen best sentence in the center area of the official paper using the style you practiced.
Step 10
Add a neat title at the top and write your name clearly below the writing.
Step 11
Decorate the borders with coloring materials being careful not to cover your handwriting.
Step 12
With your friend or family compare all entries and choose the winner by judging legibility spacing and style.
Step 13
Share your finished handwriting entry on DIY.org
Final steps
You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!


Help!?
What can we use if we don't have a ruler, lined paper, or coloring materials?
If you don't have a ruler use the straight edge of a hardcover book or a piece of cardboard to draw light margins, and if you lack lined paper lightly pencil guide lines on plain paper and substitute stickers or cut-paper shapes for coloring materials when decorating the borders.
My letters look shaky or my spacing is off when copying the sentences â how can we fix this?
If letters are shaky or spacing is uneven while you copy the first, second, or third sentence, do extra warm-up strokes on scrap paper, slow your writing for the first sentence, and lightly mark spacing ticks or use your finger as a spacer before choosing and circling your best line.
How can we adapt the activity for younger or older children?
For younger children use larger lined paper or draw wider guide lines and let them trace the sentences with a thick marker, while older kids can practice on lined paper then transfer a neater version onto the official plain paper with light margins and try cursive or calligraphy for a tougher challenge.
How can we make the official entry more special or turn the activity into a bigger project?
To enhance the entry, add a neat hand-lettered title and your name as instructed, experiment with different pens or writing styles practiced in the three copies for variety, make a simple certificate to award the winner, and photograph the decorated official paper to share on DIY.org.
Watch videos on how to run a Best Handwriting Contest
Facts about handwriting and penmanship for kids
âď¸ Research shows writing notes by hand often helps people remember information better than typing.
⨠People often judge clarity and professionalism within secondsâneat handwriting makes your work easier to read and more impressive.
đ§ Handwriting lights up brain areas for thinking, language, and fine motor controlâit's a brain workout!
đ Schools and local clubs frequently hold handwriting contests where winners earn ribbons, certificates, or bragging rights.
đď¸ The Palmer Method was a hugely popular penmanship system taught in many U.S. schools in the early 1900s.


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