
Standard two line manuscript rows provide a consistent framework for your daily homework and class notes. This layout ensures your character height and spacing remain uniform as you develop your professional handwriting.
Every section begins with a study goals box allowing you to plan your sessions and track your progress through the semester. It is about working smarter not harder to achieve your language milestones.
The specialized dotted grids are perfect for mastering the complex geometry of Korean syllable blocks. These guides help you visualize the placement of every consonant and vowel with surgical precision.
10 Rows of Standard Manuscript Paper per page for consistent daily practice.

Study Goals tracking to keep your academic progress on schedule.

Character Block reviews using the high precision Dotted Hangul Grids.

Dedicated Lined Note areas for vocabulary and class instruction.

Welcome to the Korean Writing Practice Notebook. This notebook is designed to work alongside your Korean language class — whether you are in middle school, high school, or a university language course. It gives you dedicated space to practice Hangul handwriting, work through character blocks, keep vocabulary notes, and set weekly study goals, all in one compact notebook you can bring to class or use at home.
This notebook is organized into eleven ten-page sections. Each section begins with a Weekly Study Goals page and flows through manuscript rows, dotted grid pages, and lined notes pages. Working through one section per week gives you a steady, manageable rhythm that keeps your handwriting skills progressing alongside your coursework.
Start each section on the Weekly Study Goals page. At the top of every section is a bordered goals box. Fill in the week and your current study focus in the header strip, then write your four practice goals for the week on the numbered lines below. Your goals might be specific characters you are working on, vocabulary sets from class, or handwriting skills you want to improve. Below the goals box, the page continues with seven manuscript rows so your first practice of the week starts right there.
Use the Manuscript Practice pages for your core handwriting work. The five manuscript pages in each section give you ten two-line rows per page — fifty rows total per section. Each row has a solid top line and a solid bottom line defining your writing zone, with a light gray guide line at the midpoint to help you maintain consistent character height. Use these rows to practice individual consonants and vowels, write syllable blocks, spell vocabulary words from class, or copy phrases and sentences from your lesson materials. These are your primary practice pages and you will use them most.
Use the Dotted Grid pages for character block composition. Two dotted grid pages appear in each section. The grid is formed by a regular pattern of light gray dots spaced to match the proportions of Hangul syllable blocks. Use these pages to practice writing full syllable blocks — combinations of consonants and vowels assembled into a single square unit — within the grid structure. The dots give you visual reference points for spacing and proportion without the hard lines of a ruled page, which trains your eye for consistent character sizing.
Use the Notes pages for vocabulary and class notes. Two lined notes pages close out each section. Use them to write vocabulary lists, grammar notes from class, new phrases, characters you want to remember, or anything your teacher introduced that you want to review later. Good notes make review faster and keep all your Korean study material in one place.
At the end of the notebook, four additional notes pages give you extra room for anything that overflows your section notes, end-of-semester vocabulary review, or exam preparation notes.
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