Education.com

Fine Motor Skill Development (page 3)

By J. Bullard
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall
Updated on Jul 20, 2010

Materials to Enhance Wrist Rotation

Wrist rotation includes being able to perform a twisting motion with the wrist. This is necessary for everyday activities such as opening doorknobs. Some materials that promote wrist rotation include

  • Lids and jars to match (provide a variety of different interesting jars and lids).
  • Nuts and bolts to screw together.
  • Padlocks and keys to open and close (provide several different padlocks).
  • Screws, wood to screw them into, and screwdrivers.
  • Items to take apart (hair dryer, toaster, carburetor) with a screwdriver or nut remover.
  • An Etch-a-Sketch.
  • A flashlight for taking apart and reassembling.

Materials to Enhance Wrist Stability

Children’s wrist stability is enhanced by using a vertical surface. Make sure your manipulative area includes some vertical surface work. If there is not room on the walls, consider tabletop easels.

Materials to Enhance Finger Dexterity or Moving Individual Fingers in Isolation

Children often develop finger dexterity while performing finger plays. To extend this activity to the manipulative area, you can add finger puppets (one for each finger) that the child can use to retell a familiar story, song, or finger play. Providing a typewriter for children ages 4 to 8 can also allow children to develop finger dexterity but only if they are using all the fingers as they type.

Materials to Develop the Arches of the Hand (General Hand Development)

There are several materials that are used in therapy to help develop the arches. These can also be used in an early childhood setting with preschool and K–3 children. These materials include

  • Small tongs or clothespins to pick up small objects, such as beads or cotton balls. Children can classify these objects into sorting trays.
  • Small items (pennies, marbles, plastic bugs) with teacher-created cards. The card contains a picture of the type of item and the number of items to hold in your cupped hand. The child draws a card and completes that challenge.
  • Games that include dice (the child shakes the dice in her cupped hands until she reaches a number spun on a dial).
  • Sock puppets (the child can make the puppet “talk” by opening and closing her hand).
  • Plastic packing bubbles to pop with the fingers and palm.
  • Tomy Waterfuls (games where the top is filled with water and you move small objects by pushing a button) (Myers, 1992).
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