Inside a third-grade typing class: How HEB ISD students build skills one keystroke at a time

by Matthew Sgroi, Fort Worth Report
December 30, 2025

The rhythm of learning sounds a lot like keys clicking across Salote Faasoo’s classroom at North Euless Elementary.

Third graders sit at rows of Chromebooks, fingers hovering above home keys as Faasoo moves between desks, glancing at screens and offering reminders. 

One student beams after a perfect round. He’s the fastest typist in the class, students shouted. Another groans after earning zero stars. 

“It’s hard,” admits third grader Ronan Reid, who earned five stars on his lessons. “But it challenges you.”

The brief morning lesson is part of Hurst-Euless-Bedford ISD’s growing focus on digital literacy. Each day, third graders spend about 10 minutes in Typing Club, an online platform that teaches accuracy, finger placement and rhythm — all skills the district says prepare students for reading, writing and online testing. 

“Typing builds letter recognition, especially with our lower reading students,” Faasoo said. “They have to spell the words correctly, no autocorrect like on a phone or tablet. It forces them to pay attention.”

The district’s formal keyboarding program, now in its third year, follows national guidance on how students learn typing — including proper hand placement and accuracy — as well as state standards that require students to correctly use a keyboard as part of technology instruction. Third graders are expected to reach 10 to 15 words per minute with at least 90% accuracy, according to district benchmarks. 

HEB ISD began integrating Typing Club into elementary classrooms after STAAR moved fully online in 2023. The lessons are built into the part of the day focused on reading and writing — a shift that officials and Faasoo say connects digital fluency to literacy. 

“It shows in their writing,” Faasoo said. “From the beginning of the year to now, you can see the growth.”

For many students, though, progress means patience. Most are far more familiar with tapping on touch screens than navigating a full keyboard, Faasoo said — especially when it comes to using both hands and keeping their eyes on the screen instead of the keys.

Student Arianna Cabrera said she tries her best to be accurate but sometimes still gets zero stars for falling short. When that happens, she keeps practicing and pushes herself to improve.

“Then I’ll try to do it a little faster next time,” she said.

Arianna hopes to become a doctor one day. Ronan wants to be a soccer player. For now, both are simply working through each level, adjusting to the feel of real keys under their fingers as they learn to balance accuracy, speed and focus.

It’s the consistency of those small gains that Faasoo builds on. She uses Typing Club as a warm-up before essay writing and encourages students to log in from home through the district’s online portal as developing the skills are incorporated into lessons.

“They look forward to it,” she said.

District leaders say that excitement — and steady improvement — show the effort is paying off.

“Two years’ worth of data tells us we’re moving in the right direction,” Holly Norgaard, HEB ISD’s executive director of curriculum and instruction, said at a recent board meeting. 

Students are typing at or above the district’s accuracy and words-per-minute goals, she said. 

“But we need to find that balance between the number of minutes they spend in the program and the outcomes we’re seeing,” she said.

For Faasoo’s class, the balance looks like a morning full of focus — and a few proud smiles. 

Matthew Sgroi is an education reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact him at matthew.sgroi@fortworthreport.org or @matthewsgroi1

At the Fort Worth Report, news decisions are made independently of our board members and financial supporters. Read more about our editorial independence policy here.

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Great Job Matthew Sgroi & the Team @ Fort Worth Report for sharing this story.

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Felicia Ray Owens
Felicia Ray Owenshttps://feliciarayowens.com
Writer, founder, and civic voice using storytelling, lived experience, and practical insight to help people find balance, clarity, and purpose in their everyday lives.

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