Lazy 8 Writing Training Board
Lazy 8 Writing Training Board: Is It Right for Your Child?
A Lazy 8 Writing Training Board is a figure-eight tracing tool used to build bilateral coordination, midline crossing and smooth pencil control for handwriting. It can help many children at the pre-writing stage, but whether it suits your child is best decided by a clinician after assessment, never from a single tool.
That smooth figure-of-eight loop your child traces again and again isn't just play — it's the brain rehearsing the rhythm that handwriting is built on.
In short
A Lazy 8 Writing Training Board is a simple practice tool — a board with a grooved or raised figure-eight (an infinity loop lying on its side) that a child traces with a finger, stylus or pencil. Tracing the continuous loop builds bilateral coordination, midline crossing, fine-motor control and smooth, flowing pencil movement — the building blocks of comfortable handwriting. It can be a helpful, low-pressure addition for many children working on pre-writing and writing skills, but it is one practice tool, not a diagnosis or a complete programme.What it helps with — and who it suits
The Lazy 8 pattern is popular in occupational-therapy practice because the unbroken loop encourages a child's hand to cross the midline of the body, train both sides to work together, and develop the rhythmic, automatic motion that tidy handwriting needs. It may suit your child if they:- Are at the pre-writing stage and building hand control and pencil grip
- Find letter formation effortful, or write with stiff, broken, jerky strokes
- Are working on bilateral coordination or crossing the midline
- Benefit from a calming, repetitive, sensory-friendly motor task
It is less likely to be the right first step if the underlying difficulty is with vision, posture, attention or core stability — in those cases the loop alone won't address the root. That is exactly why a tool like this works best inside a plan shaped to your child, rather than chosen in isolation.
The Pinnacle way
Whether a Lazy 8 board — or any material — is right for your child is best answered after we understand how your child actually moves, grips and sits. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an online form or a single tool. From there, our therapists can tell you whether this board fits your child's hands today, and how to use it well. Explore the Lazy 8 Writing Training Board, see how occupational therapy builds writing readiness, and learn what the AbilityScore® is and how it's established.Trusted sources
American Occupational Therapy guidance on fine-motor and handwriting development; AAP HealthyChildren guidance on early motor milestones; WHO ICF framework for functioning in everyday activities.Next step — Not sure if this is the right tool for your child? Book a Pinnacle assessment and let a clinician match the tools to your child.
What to watch
Watch how your child handles a pencil: stiff or jerky strokes, avoiding writing, tiring quickly, difficulty crossing the body's midline, or trouble with both hands working together are worth a developmental check.
Try this at home
Let your child trace the Lazy 8 with a fingertip first, slowly and rhythmically, before adding a pencil — keep it playful, a few relaxed minutes at a time, never a chore.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
What is a Lazy 8 Writing Training Board used for?
It is a practice tool with a figure-eight (sideways infinity) loop that a child traces to build smooth pencil movement, fine-motor control, bilateral coordination and crossing of the body's midline — all foundations for comfortable handwriting.
At what age can my child use a Lazy 8 board?
It is most often used at the pre-writing and early-writing stage, when children are developing hand control and beginning to form letters. The right time for your child depends on their individual motor development, which a clinician can help gauge.
Is the Lazy 8 board enough to fix my child's handwriting?
No single tool fixes handwriting. The Lazy 8 board supports motor rhythm and coordination, but if the difficulty stems from posture, vision, attention or grip, it works best as part of a wider plan shaped by an occupational therapist.
How do I know if this tool is right for my child?
The clearest way is a clinician assessment. After understanding how your child moves, grips and sits, a Pinnacle therapist can confirm whether the Lazy 8 board fits and how to use it effectively.