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Chinese Stroke Order Guide for Singapore Students

Stroke order matters more than most Singapore parents realise. Correct stroke order helps children write faster, remember characters better, and produces neater handwriting — all of which matter for school Chinese.

Why Stroke Order Matters

Many parents think stroke order is just a formality. But research shows that learning correct stroke order actually improves character recognition and recall. When your child writes a character the same way every time, their muscle memory reinforces the visual memory.

The 8 Basic Rules of Chinese Stroke Order

1. Top to Bottom (从上到下)

Write the top part of a character before the bottom part.

Example: 三 (sān, three) — write the top horizontal stroke first, then middle, then bottom.

2. Left to Right (从左到右)

Write the left component before the right component.

Example: 你 (nǐ, you) — write the left radical 亻 first, then the right part.

3. Horizontal Before Vertical (先横后竖)

When strokes cross, write horizontal strokes before vertical ones.

Example: 十 (shí, ten) — horizontal stroke first, then vertical.

4. Down-Left Before Down-Right (先撇后捺)

The left-falling stroke (撇) comes before the right-falling stroke (捺).

Example: 人 (rén, person) — left-falling stroke first, then right-falling.

5. Outside Before Inside (先外后内)

Enclosing strokes come before the enclosed content.

Example: 月 (yuè, moon) — outer frame first, then the inner strokes.

6. Inside Before Closing (先内后封口)

When a character has an enclosure that closes, write the contents before the closing stroke.

Example: 国 (guó, country) — outer frame, then 玉 inside, then bottom closing stroke.

7. Centre Before Sides (先中间后两边)

When a character has a clear centre component with side pieces, write the centre first.

Example: 小 (xiǎo, small) — centre vertical stroke first, then left and right dots.

8. Dots Last (最后写点)

Small dots are typically added last.

Example: 书 (shū, book) — write the main strokes first, add the dot last.

Practice Tips for Singapore Students

  • 10 minutes daily is more effective than 30 minutes once a week
  • Use grid paper (田字格) to practice proper proportions
  • Say the stroke names while writing to reinforce the order
  • Start with high-frequency characters your child uses in school

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Beyond Writing: Character Recognition

Stroke order practice also strengthens character recognition. When your child knows how a character is built, they can break down unfamiliar characters and guess their meaning or pronunciation more accurately.

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