The Development of Fine Motor and Handwriting Skills
The Development of Fine Motor and Handwriting Skills
The Development of Fine Motor and Handwriting Skills
handwriting skills
Kristin L. Stooksberry, OT
Occupational Therapist
Region 10 Education Service Center
Introduction
• The most important mechanical tools that
students bring to the classroom are their hands.
• Hand skills are critical for early childhood
learning.
• Refined hand skills are needed to master
handwriting; a major occupation of school aged
children. They also provide the basis for all
manipulative activities and hand tool use.
• Hands manipulate the environment to learn.
(Fine Motor Skills in the Classroom, Jayne Berry, OTR/L, Therapro Inc. 1999, pg 3)
Objectives for Teachers
• To increase your knowledge of hand skill
development
• To broaden your knowledge and sharpen your
observation skills in recognizing problems in hand
skills development
• Increase your understanding of your students’ hand
functioning
• Learn how to modify the classroom environment and
develop remediation activities to improve hand skills.
• Increase awareness of occupational therapy as a
resource service.
(Fine Motor Skills in the Classroom, Jayne Berry, OTR/L, Therapro Inc. 1999, pg 5 )
Objectives for Therapists
Vanillajoy.com
Berry, J; Fine
Motor skills
Poor pencil grasp
Poor Pencil Grasp
The role of the Occupational Therapist
in the educational environment
Evaluation and remediation:
• Determine what is interfering with the child’s
functional performance to produce written text.
• Apply clinical reasoning skills to identify the
performance components interfering with
written communication, and determine why the
child is struggling to write or has unreadable
handwriting.
Performance components related to
handwriting
There are 3 components that may be interfering
with the child’s functional performance to
produce writing:
1 photos.com
Pulling resistance toys
Finger strengthening with rubber-band
board.
Strengthening the pincer grasp
Sitting Posture for Writing
Weak abdominal muscles “I’m Stuck”
Weak abdominal muscles:W-sitting
Example of weak hands: difficulty rolling play-doh
into thin strips.
Handwriting intervention
Sensory frame of reference
Changing the writing tools: for example, using
vibrating pens, weighted pens, or chalk
Changing the body position: for example, the child
lays on his/her stomach on the floor to write
Standing to write increases level of arousal, full
extension of the trunk
Changing the surface of writing: for example using
chalk mats, trays of sand, textured wall paper,
laminated poster board.
Writing on an elevated surface
(printing/visual tracking left to right)
Crossing midline with crazy 8
Handwriting intervention
Acquisitional frame of reference
Handwriting is a motor skill that can be improved
through practice, repetition, feedback, and
reinforcement.
Use handwriting programs:
The learning progression is modeling, tracing,
copying, then writing letters and words from
memory. Handwriting programs address
spacing, size, alignment, letter forms.
(Case, et.
When to teach upper & lower case letters
Berry, Jayne. Fine Motor Skills in the Classroom, Screening & Remediation
Strategies: Therapro Inc. 1999
Olsen Jan Z. OTR and Knapton Emily F. OTR/L Handwriting Without Tears
Teacher’s Guide, 2008.