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Monster Themed Fine Motor Task Boxes

Rated 4.89 out of 5, based on 128 reviews
4.9 (128 ratings)
;
Grade Levels
PreK - 1st
Resource Type
Standards
Formats Included
  • Zip
Pages
130 pages
$4.50
List Price:
$6.00
You Save:
$1.50
$4.50
List Price:
$6.00
You Save:
$1.50
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What educators are saying

These were so much fun for my students! It was a great addition to my morning tub stations. I love the fact that fine motor skills were a big part of it.
I loved the variety of activities in this bundle! I used this for the month of October for our monster theme!

Description

Fine motor skills are a crucial part of development. These boxes help to strengthen muscles in your students' hands with a variety of activities and develop their fine motor skills while practicing their writing, letters, numbers, addition, and subtraction. The students can either do them independently or with a parent helper. There are 11 different fine motor boxes:

1. Rip paper (Feed the Monster) (2 different types)

2. Handwriting

3. Adding (clothing pins)

4. Alphabet Matching Uppercase/lowercase (clothing pins)

5. Counting goggly Eyes (1 to 1 correspondence and counting).

6. Cutting on a variety of lines

7. Number Identification

8. Trace lines (Dry erase

9. Subtraction

*Please note: if you do not have the Target Dollar Spot clothes pins I provided numbers and letters for you to make your own.

Total Pages
130 pages
Answer Key
N/A
Teaching Duration
N/A
Last updated Oct 8th, 2018
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Understand the relationship between numbers and quantities; connect counting to cardinality.
When counting objects, say the number names in the standard order, pairing each object with one and only one number name and each number name with one and only one object.
Understand that the last number name said tells the number of objects counted. The number of objects is the same regardless of their arrangement or the order in which they were counted.
Count to answer “how many?” questions about as many as 20 things arranged in a line, a rectangular array, or a circle, or as many as 10 things in a scattered configuration; given a number from 1-20, count out that many objects.
Solve addition and subtraction word problems, and add and subtract within 10, e.g., by using objects or drawings to represent the problem.

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