Top 7 Resources for Kids Occupational Therapy at Home
Occupational therapy apps
This app lets kids get creative while improving fine motor skills. Kids use the app to make, bake, decorate, store, serve, and eat virtual cookies. And don’t worry about boredom setting in: the app includes 24 recipes that let you “pour the vanilla, crack the eggs, shake the salt, and interact with the other ingredients.”
- Age range: 4+
- Cost: $0.99
- Platform: iPhone and iPad
This is exactly what it sounds like: an app for cutting buttons. It is interactive and requires users to maneuver virtual scissors — using their thumb and index finger — to cut buttons off pieces of fabric to earn points.
- Age range: 4+
- Cost: $1.99 (also offers in-app purchases)
- Platform: iPhone
This super fun and addictive game also works well in pediatric OT. Patients use their fingers to slice fruit with swords while avoiding bombs. In “event mode” players can battle against other fruit ninjas.
- Age range: 4+
- Cost: FREE (offers in-app purchases)
- Platform: iPhone and iPad
Websites to help with occupational therapy at home
OTPlan helps you find activity ideas and can be easily sorted by skills or common household materials. They offer activity ideas that support sensory and motor development through games and other engaging activities. In addition, you can purchase Skills in a Box, which is designed to promote your “child’s developmental skills and supports academic standards at the convenience of your home.”
- Age range: Boxes are aimed at children ages 3 and up
- Cost: FREE activity ideas and articles with “Skills in a Box” for purchase.
Occupational therapist Katie McKenna, MS, OTR/L, provides a list of ideas for ways families can support their child at home during school closures. Her suggestions are specific to goals or needs (such as fine and gross motor skills, handwriting and visual motor activities, sensory skills, and daily living and executive functioning skills) and can be realistically done at home within natural routines. Resources include printable activities such as an indoor scavenger hunt and a visual “calm calendar” that includes physical activities.
- Age range: Not specified
- Cost: FREE
This article includes recommendations from trauma-informed and special education teachers, OTs, and other service providers for advice on making at-home sensory spaces and activities, creating sensory tools from items found around the house, and best practices for meeting kids’ sensory needs, such as the colorful guided breathing video above.
- Age range: K–8
- Cost: FREE
Activities include help with pincer grasp, finger isolation, thumb opposition, tripod grasp, hand-eye coordination, bilateral coordination, and midline integration.
- Age range: Toddlers through kindergarten
Cost: FREE
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