Copywork ~ What’s it All About?
Copywork
is exactly what it sounds like... copying! Your
child will spend a few minutes each day copying
great pieces of work from a wide variety of sources
– literature, poetry, scripture, fables, quotes,
and so on. While your child is copying these great
works, emphasize the importance of using their very
best penmanship and making their copy as close to
the original as possible. By using this method,
your child will see the proper way to punctuate,
usage of different parts of speech, as well as
capitalization. Basically, they will see how a
great piece literature should look and be written.
Copywork will allow your child to see different
writing styles and structure, which in turn, if
consistent, will help them become better writers.
If your child can manage it, have them look and
write the whole word instead of letter by letter,
this will assist them in becoming better spellers.
My younger children who started out doing copywork
from the start are much better writers and
spellers. They don't seem to have to work so hard
at spelling. While my older children, who began
copywork later struggled a bit more. That’s not to
say copywork was a for sure cure for spelling,
however, I do believe it helped a lot.
If your child is very young, you can start with the
formation of their letters. Spend only as much time
as your child can handle doing this. Once this is
mastered you will move on to words, sentences,
paragraphs, poems, scripture, quotes... I think you
get the point.
Allow them to illustrate their pages or find pages
that are made for copywork practice. Placing these
pages in a notebook is a great way to store their
work. This allows them to not only be able to show
off their beautiful penmanship to grandparents and
friends, but also allows both you and your child to
see their progression. My kids often like to
illustrate or color a picture that goes along with
their copywork for the day. Some children enjoy
illustrating their own pictures while others enjoy
coloring pictures already provided for them.
Copywork notebooks allow your child to add any
illustration, making them very personal.
Over the years I've done different things to get my
children motivated about doing their copywork – I
used to keep separate jars with scripture verses,
quotes, and poems and they would pull them out and
that was their copywork for the day. We still
alternate days doing a verse, quote, poem,
literature and their choice for each day of the
week. However, some selections take more than one
day to complete. One bookshelf in my schoolroom is
dedicated to keeping books of poetry, fables,
quotes and so forth. I also keep a notebook where I
continually add verses, poems and quotes to be used
for copywork.
In short, if you choose to use this method, you
will find that your child will become better at
spelling, writing, grammar and penmanship. It is so
easy to implement, there really is no reason to not
give it a try!
Here are some free pages that could be used for copywork.
You could use one of these sets of notebooking pages for copywork!













