How to foster early writing skills and confidence Narelle Lancaster Occupational Therapist LOTS for...
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Transcript of How to foster early writing skills and confidence Narelle Lancaster Occupational Therapist LOTS for...
How to foster early writing skills and confidence
Narelle LancasterOccupational Therapist
LOTS for [email protected]
0408 868 837
We now expect a 4 year old child to do what was once expected at 6 years of age
Today we will discuss:
• Writing pre-cursors,
• Effective fine motor activities,
• Peggy Lego Program
Why play based?
Sensory Motor VS Visual Motor
There is more neurological activity when young children are engaged in multi-sensory activities compared to predominantly visual motor activities
Letter by letter
A child learns more effectively by tracing, copying and then writing their name – LETTER by LETTER
If children cannot do this …
Each new letter proposes a new motor sequence.
That is 52 new motor sequences to learn.
What if we can reduce that to combinations of 5 new motor actions?
Waking up children’s proprioceptive systems
What is the single primary goal of the activity?
If the child doesn’t experience success after practicing one method … change by
simplifying or modifying the task.
Development of Writing Pre-Cursors
How do we get from this
to this?
By three years of age …
• Refined pincer grip• Good bilateral integration and
orientation to their midline• Use a static quadrupod pencil grasp• Have good manipulation skills• Copy a horizontal and vertical line,
and a circle and copy a cross.• Draw a person with a head and 1 or
2 other features• Can copy basic whole body and
arm actions to songs.
By four years of age …
• Draws a person with head, face, legs and arms
• Uses tripod grasp either static or dynamic
• Copy a cross and imitate a zigzag line
• Colour in targeting a boundary• Usually have a hand preference • Can imitate simple hand actions to
songs
By five years of age …
• Have good pencil control for writing and colouring
• Can copy +, X, angular lines and squares
• Uses a dynamic tripod grasp• Has clear hand dominance• Draws people in action with other
basic depictions
By six or seven years of age …• Sophisticated tool use • Emerging in hand manipulation and
pencil pressure allowing pencil flow and speed to emerge
• Smaller symbol reproduction• Able to draw detailed, elaborate
drawings depicting scenarios• Accurately forming letters and
symbols• Cognitive conceptual and visual
spatial elements of writing emerging
• Good visual tracking, localising and switching
1. Peggy Lego sensory motor program2. Fingertip proprioception games3. Hand strengthening/pincer grasp reinforcer games4. Breaking down how a child holds a pencil into concrete steps5. Deep pressure shoulder work6. Eye hand co-ordination warm ups7. Fine motor planning games8. Lots of sensory based drawing and symbols9. Commence paper based visual motor readiness10. Name writing
Adapted Peggy Lego Directionalities and rhymes, and associated letter formations
.
“Tall man, tall man, starts at the top, pulls down to the bottom and stops.”(l i t j f) “Sideways, sideways to the magic land”(f t and visual scanning across the page)
“Starts with a click, up and around”(c o a d g q e s) “Up and over”(n m h r k p) “Down and under”(u v w b y)
Classroom expectations
3K Gross motor and sensory motor learning of the directionalities and rhymes
4K Gross motor and sensory motor learning of the directionalities and rhymes
Basic craft/ paper based practice
Utilise in prompting for drawing
Exposure to correct letter formations in a play based manner (commences motor mapping for correct formations whilst nurturing early writing confidence and interest.)
Name writing. Remember trace, copy, write – letter by letter. Consider cut our name tracers to trace and paste onto work rather than attempting to write name too early.
PP Paper based craft practice
Use a sensory motor reinforcer immediately before visual motor practice (tracing, then copying letters on paper.)
Peggy Lego 4K Classroom Session Samples• “Tall man and Sideways” Sample A• • Water painting on fence/ wall• Wheelbarrow walks, pegging onto clothesline• Sensory motor letter stations - ltijf• -marble roller letters• -tactile letters• -car/ road letters• -rice tray letters• • “Tall man and Sideways” Sample B• • Running fingers down each others backs/ bodies• Blindfolded playdough treasures• Sensory motor letter stations - ltijf• -shaving cream letters• -sandpaper letters• -torch letters• -Wikki Stix trace • • For PP add in related craft task, and paper based letter formation practice after sensory
reinforcer practice.
Moving on from Peggy Lego
Remember:
Formalising too soon may cause regression.