FS1 ‘Developing Fine Motor Control’ 12th October 2015 Workshop Our Aim We want to help parents to gain a clearer understanding of the importance of fine motor.

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Transcript FS1 ‘Developing Fine Motor Control’ 12th October 2015 Workshop Our Aim We want to help parents to gain a clearer understanding of the importance of fine motor.

FS1
‘Developing Fine
Motor Control’
12th October 2015
Workshop
Our Aim
We want to help parents to gain a clearer understanding
of the importance of fine motor development in FS1. This
workshop aims to explain the following points:
 Why is it so important?
 What do we do to help the children develop in school?
 How do we assess the children’s needs?
 How can parents help at home?
Why is fine motor control
so important in FS1?
Why is fine motor development so important?

Many children in FS1 come to school struggling to hold a pencil and
cannot recognise (and write) their name.

As these children are not developmentally ready to write, they need
specific help to strengthen the important core and hand muscles.

The hand is a complex piece of machinery and is made up of lots of joints
and muscle groups that interconnect and work together to provide
maximum dexterity.

We use daily physical intervention activities called Dough Gym & Funky
Fingers, which involve a series of hand, arm, shoulder and finger
exercises. These strengthen and develop children’s fine and gross motor
dexterity, hand-eye co-ordination, proprioception, balance, low load
control, grip and most importantly, their self-esteem!
We cannot change the demands of the curriculum, but we
can help to make children better prepared for it...
Funky Fingers in Action!
Fine Motor Development
 Children’s arms and hands contain a series of pivotal joints
which develop from biggest to smallest (shoulder, elbow,
wrist, fingers).
 Once the pivots have worked their way down to the wrist, the
journey doesn’t stop there; although for lots of children it
becomes far trickier and they often face difficulties.
 The end of the ‘pivot’ journey will be when we get that mark
making to the very last, smallest set of pivots, right at the end
of the fingers. If we can hold our mark making tool there, then
we have the fullest, most dexterous range of movement that
our bodies can provide.
This is fine-motor control!
The general starting point in FS1…
By the end of the Funky Fingers journey…
What do we do to help
children develop their
Fine motor skills in school?
Dough Gym & Funky Fingers
 We hope that children are ready to begin developing their finemotor skills when they arrive in FS1, however, there are many
children who are still at the gross-motor stage. This is where
Dough Gym comes in.
 Dough Gym works mainly on children’s shoulder, elbow and wrist
joints and gross motor strength (a child cannot master fine motor
activities until gross motor skills are developed).
 Once the gross-motor skills are developed the children are then
physically able to access the fine-motor activities – also known as
‘Funky Fingers’.
 By offering this combined intervention each day, we can make
sure we are catering for all children’s abilities so they can move
forward in the right direction, following the correct process.
Dough Gym…
…Is fast-paced, good fun and done in time to music.
It is led by an adult who calls out instructions which the children
follow using their fingers, hands and/or dough.
It is used with a small group of children alongside Funky Fingers.
Dough Gym must be based on accurate assessment and linked to
specific physical development.
Even though it is called ‘Dough Gym’, it is about much more than
the dough.
Alongside the development of their muscles, children also need
to develop their sense of proprioception and balance, which is
why they always stand up at the Dough Gym table.
Dough Gym in Action!
Funky Fingers
In a child’s journey to becoming a mark maker and eventually a
writer, they need to become proficient in certain skills. Our Funky
Fingers activities help them to get there quicker so that they are
less likely to fall behind in FS2 and later. The skills we work on are:
 Pincer grasp or grip
 Palm arches
 In-hand manipulation
 Thumb opposition
 Finger isolation
 Knuckle, PIP and DIP joints
 Bilateral co-ordination
 Hand/eye co-ordination
Funky Fingers
Bilateral co-ordination
Pincer grip
Hand/eye co-ordination
Funky Fingers
Palm strength
Knuckle, PIP and DIP joints
How does it work?
 Generally, there is one Dough Gym group and the rest of the children work
in small groups (of 4) rotating around the Funky Fingers activities.
 The Funky Fingers activities stay for a week. They are only used at Funky
Fingers time and not for the rest of the day. This helps us to monitor how
the children are using them to make sure they have ultimate impact, it also
stops the children from getting bored with them.
 The Dough Gym group changes as and when the children need it. If all
children are working on fine motor skills then the Dough Gym group can
be used for fine motor exercises and as part of the rotating groups.
 Sessions last for no more than 10 minutes.
 As the children become more proficient in their skills then we increase the
dexterity challenge of the activities that we offer them. We record this
progress to show evidence of how our environment, planning and
intervention is having a direct impact on attainment.
How do we know what each child needs?
Our first job is to assess the children. We need to know what
stage they are at so that we can provide the correct activities.
We do this by assessing their grip using a ‘grip progress chart’:
Grip 1
Grip 2
Grip 3
Grip 4
Catering for the needs of every child…
We can see on our grip progress chart
exactly where the children are in their
development. As they improve their
name moves down the board.
Each ‘grip stage’ is linked to their
pivotal stage, for example, a child at
grip stage 1 is still operating from the
shoulder. They are not yet ready to hold
a pencil effectively, they simply do not
have the strength or the skill. Such
children will be in the Dough Gym
group where they can develop the
correct skills needed to progress onto
grip stage 2.
Time to have a go!
How you can help at home…
 So many of our Funky Fingers activities are simply made
from household equipment and items which are cheap and
easy to obtain.
 Your child loves taking part in the activities at school and
you could extend this at home by providing similar activities
and by using a timer to encourage your child to have a race
against you to see who could ‘ balance the most marbles on
the golf tees’, etc…
 Dough is extremely easy to make and provides such a huge
range of opportunities for developing both gross and fine
motor skills.
Ideas to try at home…
Useful Links
Many of our fine motor activity ideas come from Pinterest …a site
where people share good ideas (about anything and everything!) Just
type in ‘fine motor activities’ or ‘Funky fingers activities’ into the search
box.
https://www.pinterest.com/
The man behind the Dough Gym and Funky Fingers concept is an early
years consultant called Alistair Bryce Clegg. He inspires much of our
practice within FS1 and his approach to early years is one we all aspire
to. You can find out more about Alistair and his approach at:
http://www.abcdoes.com/
Dough Ideas and Recipes
Dough Ideas and Recipes
Dough Ideas and Recipes
Dough Ideas and Recipes
Thank you for attending our
workshop.
We hope you found it useful!
FS1 Team
Any Questions?