OT-based explanation of Fine Motor & Visual-Motor Skills, with signs, goals, activities, and practical home exercises for autistic children.
What are Fine Motor & Visual-Motor Skills?
Fine Motor Skills
These involve the small muscles of the hands and fingers used for:
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grasping
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holding tools
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manipulating small objects
Examples: holding a pencil, buttoning, using scissors.
Visual-Motor Integration
This is the ability to coordinate what the eyes see with what the hands do.
Examples: copying shapes, catching a ball, writing within lines.
Both skills are essential for school tasks and daily independence.
Signs of Difficulty
A child may:
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hold pencil awkwardly or avoid writing
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press too hard or too lightly
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have poor handwriting
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struggle with buttons, zippers, tying laces
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avoid puzzles, blocks, or crafts
These are neuromotor issues, not lack of effort.
OT Goals for These Skills
OT works to improve:
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hand strength and endurance
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finger isolation and control
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bilateral coordination (using both hands together)
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eye–hand coordination
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accuracy and confidence
OT Activities & Exercises (Practical)
1. Hand Strengthening (Foundation)
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Squeezing stress balls
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Play-dough rolling, pinching, tearing
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Using clothespins
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Tearing paper
Why: strong hands = better control.
2. Finger Isolation & Dexterity
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Picking beads or coins
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Peg boards
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Finger games (thumb to each finger)
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Popping bubble wrap
Why: improves precision.
3. Bilateral Coordination
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Holding paper with one hand, drawing with the other
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Stringing beads
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Cutting with scissors
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Lacing cards
Why: both hands must work together.
4. Visual-Motor Integration
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Copying simple shapes (line → circle → square)
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Tracing paths and mazes
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Matching and sorting by shape/color
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Completing puzzles
Why: eye–hand coordination.
5. Pre-Writing & Writing Skills
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Vertical surface drawing (wall/board)
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Tracing patterns
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Using thick crayons first
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Gradual pencil practice
Tip: never rush handwriting.
6. Functional Daily Tasks (Best Generalization)
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Buttoning clothes
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Opening containers
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Using spoon/fork
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Pouring water carefully
Why: real-life skills transfer best.
How OT Teaches These Skills
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Starts with play, not writing
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Builds strength before precision
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Uses adaptive tools (thick pencils, grips)
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Progresses from easy → complex
Sample 10-Minute Home OT Routine
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Play-dough squeeze (2 min)
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Peg board or bead stringing (3 min)
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Shape tracing or puzzle (3 min)
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Buttoning or spoon use (2 min)
Common Parent Mistakes to Avoid
❌ Forcing long writing practice
❌ Comparing with other children
❌ Ignoring posture and seating
❌ Skipping hand-strength work
Signs of Progress
✔ better grip
✔ longer sitting tolerance
✔ improved accuracy
✔ more willingness to try tasks
Key OT Principle
Strong hands + good eye control = better learning.
