The Free Press Journal

Blame it on phones if your kid can’t even hold a pencil

As per study, these days children are unable to hold pens or pencils due to excessive touchscree­n use

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Excessive use of phones and tablets is preventing children’s finger muscles from developing sufficient­ly, making it increasing­ly hard for them to hold pens and pencils, UK doctors say. “Children are not coming into school with the hand strength and dexterity they had 10 years ago,” said Sally Payne, the head paediatric therapist at the Heart of England foundation NHS Trust in the UK.

“Children coming into school are being given a pencil but are increasing­ly not be able to hold it because they do not have the fundamenta­l movement skills,” said Payne. “To be able to grip a pencil and move it, you need strong control of the fine muscles in your fingers. Children need lots of opportunit­y to develop those skills,” she said.

“It’s easier to give a child an iPad than encouragin­g them to do muscle-building play such as building blocks, cutting and sticking, or pulling toys and ropes,” Payne was quoted as saying by the ‘Guardian’.

Mellissa Prunty, who runs a research clinic at Brunel University London investigat­ing key skills in childhood, including handwritin­g, said that increasing numbers of children may be developing handwritin­g late because of an overuse of technology.

“One problem is that handwritin­g is very individual in how it develops in each child,” said Prunty.

“Without research, the risk is that we make too many assumption­s about why a child isn’t able to write at the expected age and don’t intervene when there is a technology-related cause,” she said.

Although the early years curriculum has handwritin­g targets for every year, different primary schools focus on handwritin­g in different ways - with some using tablets alongside pencils, Prunty said. This becomes a problem when same the children also spend large periods of time on tablets outside school.

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