Unique Content Article: Smart Strategies For Improving Motor Skills In Children

Smart Strategies For Improving Motor Skills In Children


by Kevin Jones


Little kids do not come into the world knowing how to work their hands. As they get older, their muscles develop, and they begin to learn some of the basics. This is easier for some little ones than others. Improving motor skills in children is not a complicated process, and something you can do if you have a youngster who is struggling, and not very dexterous.

As an adult you may have to stop and think to rediscover how fingers and hands work in tandem to accomplish different goals. When you're buttoning buttons or tying ties, your right and left hand have different functions. One is the skilled hand. This is the one doing most of the work. The other hand works in a secondary capacity, steadying and balancing the materials you're working with.

Letting your youngster help you will help him learn how hands work together. Kids copy the things adults do, and you can take advantage of that in the kitchen. Tossing a dinner salad with a wooden spoon and fork, or tongs, along with your little one is a good exercise.

Little kids can water plants using a spray bottle and a watering can. Washing windows is a good exercise. This is simple, and something fun for kids to do.

Game night is a great way for families to spend quality time together and give youngsters with dexterity issues some constructive help. The game pieces have to be picked up and moved along the game board. This is a great way to develop strength in the child's fingers and give him practice using his forefingers and thumbs. Jigsaw puzzles are another great way for kids to develop coordination and muscle control. Pieces with knobs on the top are best for really little kids.

Instead of giving your child the big, fat crayons and chalk pieces that are easy to handle, challenge him by breaking up the colors into small pieces. Slivers of chalk and crayon color just as well as the bigger pieces. Working together, you and your youngsters can created a grid for hopscotch with sidewalk chalk. Controlling where the stone goes when it's thrown is a fun part of the game that helps develop hand eye coordination.

Something as simple as a bucket filled with pegs can give your child hours of fun and improve motor skills at the same time. You can hang a rope and let kids wash doll clothes and then hang them out to dry. Pegs can be used as drawing sticks if you have a sandbox. You can even set out paints and brushes and let your child make people out of pegs. If you have some scrap fabric and kid scissors, making clothing for the peg family is a possibility.

Try beading and threading to increase your child's finger dexterity. You have to make certain the size of the beads are age appropriate. You do not want this activity to end in a visit to the emergency room because your little one swallowed the project parts or stuffed them up his nose. Once you've determined that the project is appropriate, the possibilities are endless.




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