“…Besides these changes, students with ADHD tend to find difficulties in fine motor coordination (picking up objects, buttoning up clothes, playing ball, coloring within the lines of figures, writing onto the line in a uniform size, writing with understandable letter) and global skills (difficulties to run or jump and problems with laterality) (19) , and such difficulties may be related to visual-motor perception changes (18)(19)(20) , which are easy to identify during the speech language pathology evaluation and in the educational context. Dysgraphia stands out among the most noticeable speech language manifestations in ADHD, since it is defined as a written expression disorder that results in written skills below the expected for the age, associated with legibility (quality of forming and aligning the letters, spaces between letters and words, letter dimension), and reduced speed (production rate) (3,4,10,13,21) . Even though the reasons for dysgraphia are associated with motor planning, eye-hand coordination, visual perception, VMI, kinesthetic perception, fine motor control, sustained attention, and hand manipulation (4,10,20) , further and deeper studies are required concerning the role of visual and visual-motor perception skills to determine unintelligible handwriting, that is, the picture of dysgraphia, since these are still limited in the national literature, be it with students at the final stage of school or those with attention and learning disabilities.…”