First Grade - Development of 6 & 7 Year-Olds

Two first-grade students reading a text together

We each develop at our own pace, so it's impossible to tell exactly when a particular student will reach a specific milestone or learn a given skill. The developmental milestones below will give you a general idea of the changes you can expect as each six and seven-year-old gets older, but don't be alarmed as each student takes a slightly different course. Honor where they are and support them as they develop.

Physical Development

Smiling student with missing front teeth
  • More aware of their fingers as tools; can use their fingers to count on, trace a maze, maneuver electronic devices, balance a scale, pour exact amounts
  • Noisy, sloppy, and in a hurry; fingers are sometimes clumsy and tasks need slowing down or repeated practice to achieve  desired results
  • May fall backward out of their chairs at this age rather than sideways
  • Children at this age are teething, so they often chew on pencils, fingernails, hair, books, and other objects
  • Work in spurts and will tire easily
  • Enjoy being active, both inside and outdoors
  • Good visual tracking from left to right and back to the beginning of the next line is normative as sixes begin to read
  • Some will still have difficulty copying from board or chart; provide handouts for students to copy from at their desks
  • When writing, find spacing and staying on the line difficult because they are more interested in process than product
  • Often more comfortable standing up to work, even at their desks

Social & Emotional Development

Two young students embracing
  • Ambitious; may choose projects that are too hard
  • Proud of their accomplishments and highly competitive
  • Sometimes "poor sports" or dishonest; may invent new rules so they can win; cooperative challenge activities take the edge off their fierce need to win individually
  • Anxious to do well; extremely sensitive; severe criticism can truly be traumatic
  • Tremendous capacity for enjoyment
  • Can be bossy, teasing, or critical of others; bossy behavior is sometimes related to competition for friendships
  • Tend to complain frequently and use tantrums, teasing, bossing, complaining, and reporting on classmates to try out relationships with authority; need adult understanding but also clear boundaries and limits for acceptable behavior; it can be helpful to read books about teasing, etc. 
  • Care a great deal about friends; may have a best friend
  • Sometimes more influenced by happenings at school than at home
  • Enjoy working and playing in groups; engage in more elaborate cooperative and dramatic play
  • Like doing things for themselves; ready to try taking on individual and group responsibility

Communication & Language

Two students facing and talking to each other
  • Enjoy explaining things and sharing about things they like; partner sharing can serve as a helpful rehearsal before sharing with the class
  • Use boisterous and enthusiastic language
  • Love jokes and guessing games that the whole class can engage in; a fun activity is trying to guess a number by asking questions and explaining how they "got" the number before saying the answer

Cognitive Development

Two students playing a math game
  • Very curious; love discovery, new ideas, and asking questions
  • Better understanding of past and present, long ago and far away; can begin to understand real history markers
  • Very motivated to learn; enjoy the process more than the product; beginning to value skill and technique for their own sake
  • Love to color, paint, read, and write; experience an artistic explosion; learn the most when teachers value their efforts and encourage risk-taking
  • Comfortable with a busy level of noise and activity
  • Enjoy and learn from games, poems, riddles, and songs
  • Proudly produce a great quantity of work but are unconcerned with quality; can produce products of higher quality when encouraged to work more slowly or when teachers limit the number of complexity of tasks
  • Enjoy and learn from field trips followed by opportunities to tell about trips or use blocks to recreate things they saw

Reading, Writing, & Across The Curriculum

Reading - Provide opportunities for children this age to:

  • A first grade student presents their writing
    Continue partner reading
  • Continue targeted phonics learning 
  • Continue reading decodable texts and predictable texts while beginning to move on to easy chapter books
  • Use writing, drawing, clay, painting, drama, or blocks to show their thoughts and feelings about a story
  • Show their understanding of differences between genres (for example poetry versus a report; fiction versus nonfiction)

Writing - Expect from children this age:

  • Writing: Story development still strongly influenced by drawing, for example, stories based on a collection of drawings; writing whole sentences that are early phonemic or use "letter name" spelling strategies -- "I WNT TO HR HS" for "I went to her house"
  • Beginning Spelling: Letter naming and "transitional" spelling ("My frends ride bikes"); emerging sense of phonetic clues
  • Writing Themes: Best friends, school-related stories, family, pets, going on trips, new possessions, holidays, fantasy
  • Handwriting: Proper grasp of pencil; letters the same size or slightly larger than at five and more sloppily written because children are rushing and experimenting with new letter formation; spontaneous mixing of uppercase and lowercase letters; unpredictable spacing

Across the Curriculum - Provide opportunities for children this age to:

  • Take short wiggle breaks throughout the day
  • Have a range of choices with different degrees of difficulty for working on classroom projects and representing learning
  • Enjoy surprises and treats, including learning new games, inventing new characters, drawing treasure maps
  • Use new tools such as magnifying glasses or field journals to draw in
  • Make and use maps of the classroom, their room at home, or their route from home to school
  • Practice newly learned techniques; for example, to help them understand how scientists observe and measure growth over time, they might draw pictures of a seed they plant in the classroom and draw its growth each day
  • experiment with clay, paint, dancing, coloring, bookmaking, weaving, singing, and other arts

Physical Development

  • 1st-grade students passing objects back-to-back under and over-head with a partner
    Like confined spaces
  • Improved coordination for both gross and fine motor skills
  • More coordinated with throwing, catching, and other foundational movement skills than at younger ages
  • Muscles sometimes are tense; they often hold pencil near the point with a three-fingered, pencil-like grasp that they find difficult to relax
  • Anchor their printing and drawing to the baseline; find filling up the line space difficult
  • Increased ability to focus on objects nearby; often focus on a small, close area; writing, drawing, and numbers are tidy and small, if not microscopic
  • Work with head down on the desk, often covering or closing one eye
  • Can be sensitive to many physical and psychosomatic hurts
  • Often prefer video or online games to physical activity, though still enjoy imaginary adventures outdoors

Social & Emotional Development

Three seven-year-olds laughing and eating lunch together
  • Inward-looking; sensitive to others' feelings; empathetic
  • Often have a best friend, although their best friend might frequently change
  • Prefer working and playing alone or with one friend; enjoy one-on-one conversations and like to send notes
  • Changeable; sometimes moody or potty; may worry that "Nobody likes me!"
  • Needs security, structure, and stability; can be upset by changes in room arrangement or scheduling
  • Will rely on adults for help and constant reassurance
  • Extremely loyal to the classroom teacher; need teachers to prepare them in advance for substitutes
  • Conscientious and serious about their school work for the most part; don't like taking risks or making mistakes; can get sick from worrying about tests, assignments, etc
  • Have strong likes and dislikes
  • Demonstrate a desire to keep things new and tidy
  • Playground games such as jump rope, foursquare, and hop-scotch are more popular than team or large-group activities, although imaginary play remains strong
  • Having a strong sense of right and wrong, and concern for others leads them to sometimes tell students about classmates' behaviors

Communication & Language

Two students engaged in a conversation with each other
  • Listen as well and speak precisely
  • Rapidly develop their vocabularies; sevens love to keep notebooks of their new words
  • Shows great interest in the meanings of words
  • Secret codes, Morse code, and similar language play can engage children at this age

Cognitive Development

Seven-year-old sitting alone and writing in their notebook
  • Like to repeat tasks; like to review learning verbally or frequently touch base in other ways with their teacher
  • Weekly spelling and vocabulary lists and short tests are enjoyable for students
  • Like to work slowly and finish what they start; appreciate a "heads-up" that it's time to prepare for transitions; may find timed tests especially troublesome
  • Bothered by mistakes and try hard to make their work perfect
  • Enjoy inquiry activities and hands-on exploration, often work well in "discovery" centers
  • Like to collect, sort, and classify
  • Still like to be read chapter books by teachers and parents
  • Enjoy board games as well as computer games; especially enjoy playing games with one other person
  • Increasingly able to share what they are learning and how they feel about it through verbal, written, and artistic reflections
  • Need support for sustained, quiet work periods
  • Enjoy memorization of poems, songs, chants, and cheers
  • Comfortable with emphasis on high-quality products and proper display of work; able to accept feedback and revise work
  • A few students are still not fully able to read without vocalizing; still sometimes whisper to themselves during "silent" reading

Reading, Writing, & Across The Curriculum

Reading - Provide opportunities for children this age to:

Two first-grade students reading a text together
  • Have time for individual reading 
  • Continue phonics work; children thrive on intense phonics instruction in small groups
  • Do written reading comprehension assignments that are short and pithy; better to have students complete two or three questions thoroughly than answer many test-like comprehension practice sheets

Writing - Expect from children this age:

  • Writing: Longer stories with a beginning, middle, and end, including "chapter" books in some cases; great interest in the story line; tendency to include lots of detail; writing before drawing and sometimes even writing without drawing; readiness to begin nonfiction writing as a way to show learning from science or social studies investigations
  • Spelling: Correct spelling slowly emerging from transitional spelling; increased phonetic and sight word fluency; ease in learning capitalization and punctuation; readiness for formal spelling program
  • Writing Themes: Family and friends; sleeping over; losing teeth; pets (often including stories about the death of a pet); nightmares; worries about the death of family members, illness, war, famine, or other serious issues
  • Handwriting: Letters are often microscopic in size

Across the Curriculum - Provide opportunities for children this age to:

  • Use digital tools such as SeeSaw to show what they have learned
  • With support, take photos to incorporate into reports or class books
  • Have choices in how they represent their learning
  • Take things apart and discover how they work; sort and classify things like buttons, pictures, leaves, shapes
  • Expand vocabulary in all subject areas
  • Play games and tell jokes as a way to moderate their seriousness
  • Work with one partner rather than just groups

This content on development comes from Yardsticks: Child & Adolescent Development by Chip Wood and has been lightly adapted to better reflect the language usage and practices of SFUSD.

This page was last updated on November 8, 2023