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How to Help Your Child With Letter Reversals: The Why and the How

Tam Milledge·Teaching·6 minute read

Teaching children correct letter formation is important, but how can teachers and parents support students who reverse their letters? This post covers the basics of letter reversals, why they can often happen at a young age, and how to help kids overcome this common writing challenge at home and school.

Why do letter reversals occur?

One of the most common developmental milestones during childhood is learning to recognise letters and words- a necessary skill which must develop in order to be able to read and write. When children are first developing these early literacy skills, they may mistakenly reverse some letters. For example, they may reverse the letters 'b' and 'd', or the letters 'p' and 'q'.

This is not unusual- and there is a reason why. Our brains are born with an ability to recognise objects, regardless of their orientation – this is called mirror generalisation, or mirror invariance. This function of the brain allows us to recognise objects as being identical, even when seen in a reversed or mirror image context. For example, we are able to recognise a chair whether it is facing towards us or facing away from us.

We need this ability so that no matter what orientation things are in, we recognise them. For example, mirror generalisation allows us to recognise a horse, whether it's facing to the left or to the right.

This innate ability allows us to navigate through our environment and interact with the world around us. It also helps us identify familiar objects and remember them over time.

However, as preschool and kindergarten children develop early literacy skills, they must also learn to override their brain's tendency to recognise identical objects regardless of their orientation. This 'over-ride' will allow children to read and write letters, sounds and words correctly.

Are letter reversals normal?

Letter reversals are perfectly normal for young children as they are learning to read and write. In fact, most children will experience some degree of letter reversal during this process. It is very common for children in preschool and Kindergarten to reverse some letters in the early years of their education.

Will letter reversals resolve themselves?

Letter reversal usually resolves itself over time as children become more proficient at reading. They become less common as students enter first grade and second grade, although students may still require consolidation to ensure correct letter formation is second nature.

Correct letter formation will develop naturally for a lot of children, but other children may require some targeted intervention to assist them. So, how can educators and parents support all children to develop correct letter formation skills through our preschool programs, in primary schools, and at home?

Tips and resources for teachers, schools and parents to support correct letter formation:

1. Anything that is tactile, multi-sensory or hands-on.

Practise tracing and forming letters frequently, regularly, and with over-sized letters to exaggerate the movements. This will help children learn the shape of each letter, and how it should be written correctly. Get kids moving their hands in the air, on the carpet, or with sensory materials such as playdough, wikki sticks, sand etc.

2. Encourage children to feel the difference between different letter formations

Encouraging kids to feel the difference between swinging to the left or to the right while they are engaging with these sensory or hands-on activities.

3. Teach handwriting and letter formation with the concept of “letter cousins”.

Once students can form the bosses (l, c, r and u), they can form almost all of the other letters in the alphabet (the cousins) apart from a few lone rangers!

  • Once you know the letter l, you can write the letters t, h, p, f, b, k, j and baby cousin i.
  • Once you know the letter c, you can write the letters a, d, g, o, q and baby cousin s.
  • Once you know the letter r, you can write the letters m and n.
  • Once you know the letter u, you can write the letters y and w (note, this may be different depending on the handwriting style that you teach your kids- some styles may teach 'v' as the boss instead)
  • The 'lone rangers' are their own bosses, but there aren't many of them - v, e, x and z.

You can find my free Letter Cousin posters in the Freebee Library. They are available in all Australian state fonts, as well as a generic font option too. There are also versions for 'u' or 'v' as the boss.

4. Use mouth articulation

Mouth articulation is my number one tip for helping children with lowercase b and lowercase d reversals.

With the letter b, the mouth starts in a straight line. Therefore, we form the letter b with a straight line first.

With the letter d, the mouth starts with an open circle. Therefore, we form the letter d with a circle first.

You can read more about my tips for b & d reversals, and download my free b/d letter reversal posters and b/d reversal worksheets here.

5. Provide children with opportunities to develop strong fine motor skills

Fine motor skills are the skills that allow us to control our fingers and hand movements. They are essential for many tasks such as writing, typing, and using tools. Children can build their fine motor skills at home and in the classroom through activities such as cutting, pasting, threading, manipulating small objects and drawing/colouring.

If a child has difficulty with fine motor skills, this will often impact their handwriting, and potentially their learning. The child may have trouble controlling the movement of their hand and fingers, which will result in shaky or uneven writing, and may reduce a child's writing stamina. A child may also have difficulty with letter formation and spacing between letters.

There are plenty of engaging, play-based learning opportunities that will help children to build their fine motor skills at the same time. For some ideas to get you started, you might like to read the following blog posts:

Are you a parent or teacher who wants to learn more about the best ways for teaching children how to read and write?

Download your FREE copy of the Phonics & Beeyond Handbook - a comprehensive guide to support teachers in implementing evidence-based spelling and phonics strategies in early years and primary school classrooms. You'll find hundreds of pages which include:

  • up-to-date research on evidence-based literacy education practices, how children learn, and what it looks like practically in primary schools
  • programs and curriculum recommendations for teaching reading and spelling (particularly for schools and educators in Australia)
  • play based learning activities for the home and classroom
  • resources, lessons and ideas for developing strong phonics skills from teachers all around the world
  • quality assessment strategies and tasks for reading, phonics and spelling (top tip- it's more about formative assessment, and less about the South Australia spelling test!)
  • Tips for improving phonics education in schools

Tam Milledge
@mrslearningbee
Tam holding a resource she created.
Tam is passionate about creating purposeful, research-based resources that help students build strong foundations for success.

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