School is out and kids are ready to play!




Summer activities can be both fun and beneficial! Many activities will work on skills like bilateral coordination, hand strength, pincher grasp, planning and mental flexibility. These skills help prepare your child for the following school year; fostering independence in writing, classroom participation and self-care tasks.

Here are some easy ways you can incorporate and maintain skills over the summer:

Put the ‘FUN’ in FUNCTIONAL! There are so many ways to make activities fun while still working on fine and gross motor skills!

Develop shoulder strength and stability
·      Work on vertical easel – magnets on fridge, tape paper to wall or vertical easel, purchase window writer markers and let your child draw on the windows or mirrors. 
·      Draw, color or read book lying on tummy propped up on elbows.
·      Play outside on the playground-climbing swinging and crawling develop core and shoulder muscles that are important for fine motor control.
·      Animal walks:

Develop fine motor skills
·      Play with Lego and other connector toys.
·       Do crafts - braiding, beading, weaving, small pegs and pegboards such as lite brite
·       Playing with play dough, use a variety of tools (rolling pin, knife, scissors, cookie cutters etc.).
·       Use spray bottles to play at bath time or to water plants outside

Develop drawing skills
·      Help your child practice drawing shapes; do guided drawing where you draw a picture, step by step, together.
·      Write letters and draw shapes using sidewalk chalk, shaving cream in the bathtub, salt or sugar in a cake pan or finger paint to make practicing letters more fun and multisensory.


Encourage Independence in Self-Help Skills. If you find you do not have to rush out the door every day during the summer, this is a great opportunity to take the extra time to allow kids to work on self-help tasks on their own. Examples include getting dressed, brushing teeth, spreading jam on toast, making their own bowl of cereal, packing their own lunch for a picnic and tying their shoes.
                                                                                 
Stay Active! Visit the local park/playground, go swimming at an outdoor pool, walk around the Stampede grounds or fly a kite. Find yourself in a rainy day? Make an obstacle course in the house or better yet, dress for the weather and go puddle jumping or look for worms.

Just PLAY! After a long year of being over scheduled and over worked, kids should be encouraged to engage in unstructured play. This is a child-led activity that fosters improvisation and creativity.  Allowing them to explore gives them freedom and control, while building confidence and resilience. Games that involve cards, dice or other small pieces work on dexterity. Playing with a friend incorporates important social skills like turn taking, empathy, and cooperation.

Enjoy the summer!

Emma Zacharias, BScOT
Occupational Therapist