Indoor Gross Motor Activities
Muscle-moving play doesn’t have to take up a ton of room. Given just a little floor space, your child can enjoy these skill-building activities inside.
Building and navigating: Create obstacle courses with furniture, pillows, boxes, and blankets. Dancing: Kids go can freestyle or follow songs with movements, such as “Head, Shoulders, Knees, and Toes,” “I’m a Little Teapot,” “The Wheels on the Bus,” or “Popcorn.” Hopping: Set up targets with masking tape or cardboard to make jumping from place to place on the floor more fun. Large-scale arts and crafts activities: These stimulate both large motor skills and creativity. Playing pretend: Kids boost motor skills when they use their bodies to become waddling ducks, stiff-legged robots, galloping horses, soaring planes, or whatever they can imagine. Pulling and pushing: Playing with wagons, large trucks, doll strollers, or shopping carts helps develop upper-body strength and coordination.
Outdoor Gross Motor Activities
Kids have plenty of room outside to play hard and challenge their muscles. Help them by suggesting activities such as:
Balancing: Have your child walk on a low beam or plank at the playground or a homemade balance beam. Climbing, stretching, and reaching: Set up obstacle courses with rocks, logs, or playground equipment. Riding: Encouage kids to play with tricycles, scooters, and other ride-on toys. Swimming: Most kids love water play of all kinds, from swimming to playing with water squirters or sprinklers. Playground play: Playgrounds offer opportunities to pump their legs on a swing, shoot down a slide, climb ladders, and run freely, often with friends. Walking: Take a walk around the neighborhood or a park. For variety, add in marching, jogging, skipping, hopping, or even musical instruments to form a parade. As you walk, tell stories, look for colors, count, or play games. Throwing and catching: Provide large, lightweight, soft balls for throwing, catching, kicking, and rolling.
Gross Motor Skills Games
Some activities for developing gross motor skills work best outside, but others can be done indoors. Motivate major movement with games such as:
Hit the target: Use hula hoops or sidewalk chalk to designate targets on the ground, then have kids aim bean bags or balls (even snowballs). Jump the brook: Set out two jump ropes, or draw two chalk lines to represent the brook, and have kids try to jump over it. Try making it wider in some spots and narrower in others for a few levels of challenge. Paper plate skates: Use paper plates to glide along on a carpet. Try to imitate speed skaters, hockey players, or figure skaters. Soccer: Instead of playing a real game, just let kids enjoy kicking the ball and aiming it toward a goal or a large cardboard box or laundry basket turned on its side. For indoor play, you can use crumpled paper instead of balls. Tag: Teach little ones simple ways to play tag or other classic games such as Follow the Leader, Mother May I, and Simon Says.
Fine Motor Skills for Preschoolers
Kids this age are also working on fine motor skills, which are crucial to their ability to perform tasks like holding a pencil, cut with scissors, use silverware to eat, and more. These activities can help children strengthen and learn to use the small muscles in their fingers and hands.
Coloring and tracing with crayons, pencils, or markers Cooking (pouring, shaking, sprinkling, kneading, tearing, cutting with a butter knife) Cutting with safety scissors Fingerplays (songs such as “The Itsy Bitsy Spider” that have accompanying hand movements) Lacing cards or stringing beads Manipulative toys such as blocks, puzzles, or dolls with clothes to take on and off Puppet shows Sand play (pouring, scooping, sifting, building) Sidewalk chalk or any art project, like finger painting or playing with clay
A Word From Verywell
Your preschooler needs plenty of time to play and explore different activities that will help them develop their motor skills. Look for activities that will help them build strength in all their muscles, big and small.