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“It was hard to hold my pencil like this at first, but I kept trying. Now I do it all the time.”
“It was easy. My daughter changed her grip within two weeks.”
Some children easily transition to the Tripod Grasp. For others, it is a challenge to keep the fingers in the tripod position. There are a variety of tools available to help keep the fingers in place. They are temporary tools, much like training wheels on a bicycle.
How hard is it to change the grip?
Easiest
Easy
Extra Training
Grippers with indentations or cups for the fingers help those who have a hard time keeping the fingers in place.
Pencil Grippers help keep the fingers in position.
OLD HABITS
The Twist n' Write Pencil takes a different approach on holding the pencil and helps those who have established a grasp that is harder to change.
"The new grip will probably feel uncomfortable at first."
“At first, my son said that the pencil with the pencil gripper was uncomfortable. I explained that he was familiar with the other way of holding a pencil and that as he got accustomed to the new grip it would feel better. He used the pencil with the gripper only when we sat down together to draw. I ignored how he held the pencil at other times of the day.
After about six weeks, during a time when he was drawing on his own, I noticed that he held his pencil (no gripper) using the tripod grip. I said, “Look how you are holding your pencil.” He looked down at his hand and said, “I didn’t mean to do it!” We practiced together with the gripper a few more weeks, until he realized that he really didn’t need it anymore.
The gripper was temporary—like using training wheels on a bike.”