Simple Fine Motor Centers | 12 Skills | Special Education
- PDF
What educators are saying
Description
These Simple Fine Motor Activities were created with your self-contained special education students in mind and are the perfect way to implement a fine motor activities to your classroom in a structured way!
These centers work on Cutting, tracing, hand strength, scissor skills, and more.
WHAT CENTERS ARE INCLUDED?
+ Trace It- Trace the line
+ Punch It- Hole punch
+ Staple It- Staple paper
+ Cut It- Cut the lines
+ Poke It- Use a Montessori hole puncher
+ Dot It- bingo daubber markers
+ Push it- Pom poms into a container
+ Slice It- Slice the playdough
+ Stick It- Dot stickers
+ Tong It- Use tongs to move pom poms
+ Clip It- Paper clips on cardboard
+ Chop It- Cut through toilet paper rolls
WHAT'S INCLUDED FOR EACH CENTER?
+ Center Labels
+ Visual directions for each center (real pictures)
+ Set up guide for each center
+ Cards for centers that use them
+ Tips for Differentiating
+ Materials Needed list
+ Photos of resource assembled
+ Teacher Guide Book
WANT SEASONAL FINE MOTOR CENTERS?
- Simple Fine Motor Centers: FALL
WHAT TEACHERS ARE SAYING:
"This was perfect for my fine motor center! I wanted to have a station where students could work on maintaining their fine motor skills, but didn't have time to create all the materials for it. I bit the bullet and bought this pack and I am so glad I did! I even bought the bins from Costco to put everything in. That and the instructions for each task made it easy for my paraprofessionals to use with my students. I am starting a new position this year and will definitely be using it again!"
- Katrina
"My students desperately need practice in this area and my caseload continues to get younger, so I am looking forward to an independent activity that can last the entire year. In a district that does not provide planning for self-contained teachers, this resource is going to be a godsend!"
-Amber
"My students like this as a different way to work on fine motor skills that wasn't the same old paper cutting. This was so thought out that my OT was impressed! "
- Kaylie
WHERE CAN I FIND MATERIALS?
Some materials will need to be teacher provided but many can be found in your classroom already (examples: scissors, playdough, pom poms, toilet paper rolls, stickers)
WHERE CAN I SEE A PREVIEW?
Click the preview button to see more.
Click here to read about how to use in the classroom.
Click video preview to see the video walkthrough.
FIND ME HERE!