What skills do fine motor skills include?
Academics skills including
Pencil skills (scribbling, coloring, drawing, writing)
Scissors skills (cutting)
Play
Construction skills using lego, Duplo, puzzles, train tracks
Doll dressing and manipulation
IT use (e.g. mouse and stylus manipulation)
Self-care including
dressing – tying shoelaces, doling up sandals, zips, buttons, belts
eating – using cutlery, opening lunch boxes and food bags
hygiene – cleaning teeth, brushing hair, toileting.
Note: Visual perception (accurately using vision, ‘seeing’ and interpreting) is not strictly a fine motor skill but directly supports fine motor skill performance.
What are Fine Motor Skills?
Fine motor skills involve the use of the smaller muscle of the hands, commonly in activities like using pencils, scissors, constructing with lego or Duplo, doing up buttons, and opening lunch boxes.
Fine motor skill efficiency significantly influences the quality of the task outcome as well as the speed of task performance. Efficient fine motor skills require a number of independent skills to work together to appropriately
manipulate the object or perform the task.
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Why are fine motor skills important?
Fine motor skills are essential for performing everyday skills as outlined above as well as academic skills. Without the ability to complete these everyday tasks, a child’s self-esteem can suffer, their academic performance is compromised and their play options are very limited. They are also unable to develop appropriate independence in ‘life’ skills (such as getting dressed and feeding themselves) which in turn has social implications not only within the family but also within peer relationships.
How can you tell if a child has fine motor skill difficulties at a glance?
Avoidance and/or disinterest of fiddly finger skills (and has tasks listed above)
Preferring physical activity (again to avoid sit down tasks)
Interest in ‘passive’ activities such as IT (e.g. watching TV an IPAD that don’t require Fine Motor skills)
No interest in pencil or scissors skills
Being ‘bossy’ in play and asking others to “draw a cat for me”
Not persisting in the face of a challenge (e.g. asking parents to fix a problem without physically trying to fix it themselves)
Waiting for parents to dress them or clean their teeth rather than trying themselves
Refusal to use a stylus with the IPAD