For Teachers

Video tutorial on using the School Cursive fonts in Canva

Submitted by Liesbeth on Tue, 07/29/2025 - 06:50

More and more teachers are using Canva to create materials. With a Canva Pro or Canva for Education account, you can upload your own fonts. Unfortunately, when it comes to the School Cursive fonts, Canva has similar limitations as Microsoft Powerpoint. That's why I have created a video on Youtube demonstrating how to install and use these fonts in Canva.

 

Video tutorial on installing and using the School Cursive fonts

Submitted by Liesbeth on Tue, 10/22/2024 - 10:41

A lot of teachers have found my School Cursive fonts at the beginning of this school year. Unfortunately, not everybody knows how to get these fonts to work , or even knows they need to something special to get them to work. That's why I have created a short video on Youtube demonstrating how to install and use these fonts on Microsoft Word and Microsoft Powerpoint.

 

 

How to transition your students to wide ruled paper

Submitted by Liesbeth on Fri, 02/10/2023 - 14:19

Today I've launched two resources on TeachersPayTeachers to help students to transition from 3/8" fully lined paper to wide ruled paper. I've created these resources because of a problem I noticed in many handwriting curricula: the transition from 3/8" fully lined paper to wide ruled paper is too abrupt.

What the D'Nealian workbooks get wrong: vertical line spacing

Submitted by Liesbeth on Mon, 10/17/2022 - 09:35

The official D'Nealian workbooks are published by Savvas and can be viewed on their website.

I've created a D'Nealian font and I'm selling various workbooks and editable worksheets made with this font, but there is one particular feature of the official D'Nealian workbooks that I have not replicated in my materials: the way in which the line is divided vertically.

 

D'Nealian vs. Zaner-Bloser: how do their cursive fonts differ?

Submitted by Liesbeth on Mon, 09/05/2022 - 11:03

If can sometimes be difficult to find a cursive font to match your handwriting curriculum. Many fonts claim to be D'Nealian but aren't. And many other fonts don't claim anything at all (for trademark reasons) but might actually be a pretty good match. In this article I look at the distinguishing characteristics of the cursive fonts of two major handwriting curricula: D'Nealian versus Zaner-Bloser.