Originally Posted by La Texican
He started at age 2.  He never got into the jigsaw puzzles.  He started the mazes with a fat marker in a fist grip which let me teach him how to control his lines before he developed finger strength.  My daughter is 20 months old now.  She has some random extra workbook that I give her just to scribble in just to keep her from marking her brothers workbooks.  The lesson is "write on this book, not on that one."  The other day one page had a large circle on it so I tested her to see if she'd follow my finger.  She did.  She didn't draw a straight line but narrowed her scribbling back and forth down tighter and did actually follow my finger halfway around the circle which is enough to get started with the maze book, which I haven't bought another copy of yet.  She has a coloring book of strawberry shortcake.  The other day I told her verbally, "go color her eyes, where's her eyes" and she scribbled over her eyes.  Then I said "color her shoes".  She did.  Using a workbook will teach how to control the pencil and how to follow the instructions.  She just got her first two lessons.  I'll buy her the Kumon maze book soon.   She's a prolific scribbler anyway and she has a dry erase easel. (supervise the markers !!!)

I think if you want to use workbooks it's just a way to develop skills like understanding directions and learning to draw your response down to the piece of paper.  

He was close to three when he  used scissors to cut straight lines.  We worked together on a construction paper chain and a construction paper American flag.  I say that because there are cutting workbooks but he cuts fine and you really have to practice with straight lines first, but you have got a year or two before you try that.



I think this game helped his fine motor skills.  It's the travel sized version.  I bought it at Walmart. http://www.toysrus.com/product/index.jsp?productId=2297894

Thanks!
She was doing so very good with not drawing on walls. I told her once not to draw on the walls (when she started to) many months ago and then she was allowed full access to her crayons. She carried them everywhere and scribbled on only paper that she found or was given. Then one day she apparently decided it was time to go for walls and lots of other things in the house...

Guess you can't really trust toddlers... I'm obviously a first time parent haha.

My husband keeps putting the Sharpie back in the desk drawer and two days in a row she's gotten it -pretty much right in front of him- and drew lines all over her arms and on his desk chair (while he was kneeling in front of her AT the desk doing calculus! I guess his back was hurting while sitting in the chair...ahh) I finally confiscated it and hid it up high.

Last edited by islandofapples; 06/02/12 10:05 PM.