Deanna Macioce, MS, OTR/L
Being
 back at school means that as therapists, teachers, and parents we start
 to pay a little closer attention to educational needs. We go from 
making sure our children are getting enough outside play during summer 
to what the needs are for them to breeze through their school day with 
ease. This includes attention and focus, handwriting and visual motor 
skills, as well as, social skills. From preschool through high school, 
much of a student's day involves utilizing their hands. Therefore, it is
 important to establish good fine motor and dexterity skills early on in
 order to set them up for success. Strong foundational hand skills help 
establish proper handwriting and scissor skills.
Some
 children naturally develop typical fine motor skills. Moving from a 
mass grasp to the ideal tripod pencil grasp through everyday play. 
However for many, especially those lower tone, sensory children this 
does not always happen. Without proper attention to developing these 
skills, it can have a long-term affect, making handwriting, coloring and
 scissor skills more difficult, especially in the realm of endurance to 
carry them out.  
Highlighting
 some activities and developmental needs will help to focus on how you 
can work on these with your child, especially the younger ones who are 
starting to piece together the fine motor puzzle.
Infancy
 offers a time of exploration. Pay attention to the toys that they are 
presented with, making sure the toys are of varying sizes. This will 
allow the child to develop different grasp patterns, strengthening the 
muscles of the hands. In addition, play with these toys in varying 
position, such as on the belly or sitting upright.   As a child begins 
to move by crawling always encourage crawling with opened hands to 
ensure proper weight bearing through the elbows, wrists, and hands. To 
strengthen palmer arches set up activities that allow them to crawl with
 objects in their hands. Such as crawling through a tunnel to obtain a 
puzzle piece and then crawling back through to place it into the board.
Moving
 through the toddler stage, grasp and fine motor development begin to 
take on the focus of using writing tools and scissors. Giving children 
the opportunity to play with manipulatives is key. From stacking blocks 
of varying sizes and shapes to negotiating different pieces into a shape
 sorter, many of the early hand skills are developed through play. 
Therefore, pulling out those traditional toys of puzzles, snap beads, 
lacing activities and blocks offers more opportunity for fine motor 
development than just the push-button toys. In addition, with 
supervision allow your child to explore with crayons and markers. And 
once again, utilizing ones of various sizes is beneficial. There is no 
need to throw away those broken crayons, using them while drawing and 
coloring helps to encourage the development of a triad grasp.
To
 help develop finger strength, activities using play dough, putty, and 
items such as Moon Sand provide opportunities for play, while improving 
fine motor skills. Hands working to knead and mold these substances 
encourage individual finger and grasp strength. Rolling out the dough 
and pinching both help improve palmar arches and pinch grasp. You can 
also work on these skills in the kitchen with cookie and bread baking. 
Finger strengthening and dexterity can naturally be addressed in 
day-to-day tasks, such as opening and closing small plastic containers 
and bags. By placing snacks and toys in these, children are naturally 
working on fine motor skills, and they are easy to take on the go.
In
 regards to grasp development, early on we look at how a child develops a
 pincer grasp (using the tips of the thumb and pointer finger together).
 As toddlers, presenting them with small objects to safely eat, such as 
Cheerios, Gerber Puffs, etc. helps to encourage them to use a pincer 
grasp. To assist in the process, you can gently hope their hand allowing
 them only use of the thumb and pointer finger. In addition, at this 
stage, it is important to pay attention to isolated index finger use. 
This means that as children are pointing at objects in a book, 
activating push button toys, etc. they are using a single pointer finger
 and not the entire hand.   As children grow older, you can help to 
encourage the use of the thumb and index finger only by placing a small 
object or cotton ball in the palm of their hand to hold during 
activities, such as writing, coloring or game playing.  This helps them 
improve finger grasp strength and use the thumb and pointer finger on 
their own.
Providing
 activities that directly work on these skills are beneficial. Magna 
Doodle boards and Aquadoodle Mats allow them to work on grasping and 
holding different tools to perform drawing and pre-writing activities. 
In addition, crafts are an ideal way to pull in fine motor skills, from 
ripping small pieces of paper to glue onto a template, crumbling tissue 
paper, and using pincer grasps to obtain objects to glue such as 
macaroni and buttons. Another way to work on finger strengthening 
through ripping paper is by allowing your children to rip up your daily 
junk mail.
Playing
 and using large tweezers, strawberry hullers, or even kitchen tongs to 
obtain and move objects, such as blocks, pom poms, or beads and place 
into a bowl or egg carton container. In addition, there are games and 
toys on the market that provide these items, such as Operation.
So,
 it is never too late to fine tune your child's fine motor strength. It 
will be only make the daily tasks they face at school easier.