10 Fine Motor Warm Ups Exercises For Handwriting Tasks: Pencil Walks
10 Fine Motor Warm Ups Exercises For Handwriting Tasks: Pencil Walks
10 Fine Motor Warm Ups Exercises For Handwriting Tasks: Pencil Walks
Fine motor warm up exercises is a good way to “wake up” the fingers and hand muscles for writing. It makes a
fun transition into writing tasks. Below you will find some quick, easy exercises to do with your class.
PENCIL WALKS
Pencil walks are a simple fine motor activity that the whole class can do before starting a handwriting
assignment. Using your dominant hand, hold eraser-end pencil as you would grasp it to write (using your
thumb, index and middle fingers). Use only these three fingers to “walk” down the shaft of the pencil to the tip.
Flip the pencil over, then “walk” back up to the eraser end. Be sure not to use your ring finger or pinkie, or
other hand, to help! Have “walking” races between students, or time students to “break records” to motivate
them.
PENNY TRANSLATION
“Translation” is ability to move an object that is in the palm of your hand, to your fingertips of the same hand,
using just finger movements. Translation involves finger isolation and finger coordination skills, and so is a
great warm up to handwriting. I like using a penny, but any small item will work – like a button, paperclip,
bobby pin, pen cap, erasertop or marble. Motivate kids by timing how long it takes them to get the object to
their fingertips, or who can move the smallest object the fastest.
Fine Motor Warm Up Exercises For Handwriting | Composed By Amanda Atkinson MS; OTR/L 1
in order to make it slide to the other side of the table. Each player only gets 5 flicks. The goal is to get it as close
to the edge as possible in those 5 flicks without going over the edge.
FINGER HOCKEY
You already know how to play this game. Two players sit or stand on either side of a desk or table. Mark out a
“goal” using masking tape on each side. Make a “puck” out of crumbled paper, a cotton ball, a small pom pom
ball, a coin, etc. Using your thumb and index or middle finger, take turns shooting the “puck” into the goal.
Fine Motor Warm Up Exercises For Handwriting | Composed By Amanda Atkinson MS; OTR/L 2
SPIN THE LID
This is an easy way to recycle your old lids - any size lids will work (tomato sauce jars, baby food jars, butter
tub lids, coffee canister lids, etc.) Place your hand palm facing upward, holding the lid with your fingertips.
Keeping your hand in this upward position, use your fingers to rotate the lid in a circle. Make the task
entertaining by seeing who can “get to the….” marker first. This activity can easily be made into a fun and/or
academic activity by placing “markers” on the lid. Using your thumb as the “pointer”, have the students rotate
the lid to a desired point. Use letters, numbers, colors, etc.
THUMB WAR
As long as your students can follow rules and accept defeat, a good old fashioned game of thumb war works on
thumb isolation and strengthening. Make sure the student keeps their forearm and pinkie side of the hand ON
the table.
Fine Motor Warm Up Exercises For Handwriting | Composed By Amanda Atkinson MS; OTR/L 3