Research byAnabela Malpique, Deborah Pino Pasternak and Susan Ledger,shows children produce better pieces of writing by hand. But they need keyboard skills too
Children today are growing up surrounded by technology. So it’s easy to assume they will be able to write effectively using a keyboard.
Our research suggests this is not necessarily true.
We need to actively teach students to be able to type as well as write using paper and pen or pencil.
Our research
Our team has published two recent studies investigating children’s handwriting and typing.
In a study published last month we looked at Year 2 students and their handwriting and keyboard writing. This study involved 544 students from 17 primary schools in Perth, Western Australia.
We assessed how easily students wrote stories using paper and pencil compared to writing stories using a laptop. We found they produced longer and higher-quality handwritten texts. This was based on ten criteria, including ideas, vocabulary, spelling and punctuation.
These findings echoed our December 2023 study where we did a meta-analysis of studies published between 2000–2022. These compared the effects of writing by hand or keyboard on primary students’ writing.
We looked at 22 international studies involving 6,168 participants from across different countries, including the United States, United Kingdom, Canada and other non-native English-speaking countries, such as Germany and Portugal.
Our analysis showed primary students produce higher quality texts using paper and pen or pencil than when using a keyboard.