

In addition to lessons on the fundamentals, KidzType (opens in a new tab) offers a wide variety of games that focus on learning such aspects of typing as letters, home row, upper row, numbers, words, sentences, and more. Games allow the user to select complexity and difficulty, and final scores and a high score for comparison make it easy to track progress. Playful themes range from aliens to airplanes and race cars to drive the lesson home. Most kids will quickly be ready for more of a challenge. Type-a-Balloon (opens in a new tab) has multiple versions of the game and three settings that make the balloons fly faster, but kids ready to type sentences may want more.Īnother good starter program is DanceMat Typing (opens in a new tab). Colorful animals guide kids through each of the keyboard’s three letter rows and then to numbers and shifting with a focus on specific keys and proper hand positioning. But it’s mainly an introduction to basic typing skills. This balloon-popping game will entice a young child unfamiliar with letters or a keyboard to find and type the letter depicted on each balloon before it floats up, up and away. They are excellent not only for teaching basic typing skills, but also for youngsters learning their ABCs. They focus on single-letter key placement and moving to combining letters to form words.

These typing games for kids are geared toward beginner, novice, and intermediate typists.
