3 activited that include plastiline
Kids usually love to play with plasticine. The bright colours, the squish, the endless shapesโฆ It’s all very inviting. But from a child-development point of view, plasticine is doing something much deeper:
Plasticine, which is usually firmer and more resistant than playdough, makes little hands work just a bit harder; quietly training hand strength, fine motor control, focus, planning, and even early literacy and numeracy skills.
Recent research shows that activities using playdough, clay, or plasticine can significantly improve fine motor skills in early childhood, including cutting, colouring, tracing letters, and shaping objects. [1][2] In turn, fine motor skills are moderately and reliably linked to childrenโs reading, writing, mathematics, and broader cognitive development. [3][4]
Below are three ways we love using plasticine.
Why plasticine is such a powerful โbrain toolโ
Fine motor skills involve the small muscles of the hands and fingers plus handโeye coordination. These skills support tasks like:
- holding a pencil,
- buttoning clothes,
- manipulating math manipulatives, and
- tracing or writing letters and numbers. [1][5]
Multiple recent reviews show that fine motor development is not just โnice to haveโโitโs tied to:
- early reading and writing,
- numeracy, and
- cognitive skills such as working memory and executive functions (planning, inhibition, flexibility). [3][4][7]
So when kids squeeze, roll, and shape plasticine, theyโre not just โkeeping busyโ. Theyโre building foundational skills that connect directly to learning.
Why plasticine instead of softer playdough?
Both are great. Research using playdough shows clear improvements in fine motor skills in early childhood. [2] Plasticine, however, is typically:
- denser and more resistant, requiring more finger strength and sustained effort, and
- less likely to collapse when building small, detailed forms, which supports more complex, goal-directed projects (think letters, miniature models, detailed 3D pictures).
An experimental study comparing plasticine and clay play in young children found that both materials improved fine motor performance (cutting, colouring, tracing letters, and object-making), and highlighted how these materials help children regulate finger muscle strengthโpressing with the right amount of force. [1] That graded force is exactly what kids need later when writing with pencils or using tools.
So in practice:
- Playdough is fantastic for exploration, big shapes, and quick, soft manipulation.
- Plasticine shines when you want more resistance (hand strengthening), finer detail, and projects that hold their shape longerโlike dioramas, 3D โpaintingsโ, or crisp letters and numbers.
3 ways to use plastiline
1. Sculptures and dioramas: small hands, big stories
What it looks like
Set out some plasticine, a piece of cardboard or a little box, and invite your child to โbuild a tiny world.โ
They might make:
- a jungle with snakes and tigers,
- a space scene with planets and rockets, or
- a mini version of the playground or their favourite show.
Suddenly the cardboard turns into a stage, and the plasticine becomes the cast.
Whatโs happening for your child
- Stronger, steadier hands
- Planning without a worksheet
As they build their tiny world, kids make all kinds of choicesโwhat to add, where to put it, and how to fix it when it doesnโt work. Those small decisions are gentle practice for the planning and problem-solving theyโll use at school and in daily life - Feelings and stories in 3D
A diorama gives children a way to show what matters to themโfriends, worries, favourite placesโwithout needing the perfect words. Art and craft activities like these are linked with better mood and a stronger sense that life is meaningful, even in large research studies with adults. [6] For kids, itโs an easy, safe way to say, โThis is my world.โ
Easy ideas for home or classroom
- โCan you make a tiny park/playground/farm?โ
- โLetโs make the ocean and choose what lives there.โ
- โBuild your favourite scene from this story we just read.โ
In class, use dioramas to show a moment from a book, a community scene, or even a science topic (habitats, planets, life cycles).
2. โ3D paintingโ: plasticine as squishy paint
What it looks like
Spread out cardboard, canvas, or thick paper. Show your child how to:
- press plasticine flat to make a colourful background,
- roll little pieces and stick them on top,
- blend and smudge colours together with their fingers, and
- add raised lines, spirals, or dots for extra โpopโ.
Itโs like painting, but the picture gently pops off the page.
Whatโs happening for your child
- Two hands working together
One hand usually holds the cardboard still while the other places and smooths the plasticine. That kind of two-hand teamwork, plus eyeโhand coordination, is a big part of fine motor development. [1][2]
Movements that feel like early writing practice
When children make thin lines, little curves, and controlled dots with plasticine, theyโre rehearsing movements that are very similar to those used in handwritingโjust in a much more playful way.ย - Calm through repetition
Rolling, pressing, and smoothing can be wonderfully calming for many kids. - Joy and pride in making something
For children, that sense of, โI made this!โ is powerful for confidence and emotional wellbeing.
Easy ideas for home or classroom
- Invite kids who dislike drawing: โInstead of drawing a tree, can you build one on the page?โ
- Ask them to show different textures: rough bark, smooth water, fluffy clouds, scratchy grass.
- Turn 3D paintings into โtouch and tellโ pictures: children can describe what each part feels like as well as what it looks like.
- In class, use 3D plasticine pictures as covers for stories, science posters, or โall about meโ projects.
3. Forming letters and numbers: plasticine as a literacy buddy
What it looks like
Instead of only tracing letters and numbers with a pencil, children:
- roll plasticine into long โsnakesโ,
- bend them into letter or number shapes on a mat or card, and
- sometimes trace over the finished shape with a finger.
You end up with bumpy, colourful letters and numbers that kids want to touch.
Why this matters for learning
- Hands getting ready for pencil work
When kids build letters and numbers with plasticine, they are strengthening the same muscles and control theyโll need for writing later on. - Learning with eyes, ears, and hands together
When a child makes a letter, they can:- see its shape,
- feel its bumps and curves,
- move their hand along the path, and
- say the sound or number name out loud.
- Maths you can hold
Building numbers, making โsetsโ (like five plasticine apples), or modelling simple equations (three apples + two more) gives children a very concrete way to explore quantity.
Easy ideas for home or classroom
- Print or draw big bubble letters and numbers. Invite children to โdressโ them with plasticine snakes.
- Start with letters that are meaningful: their name, a siblingโs name, or a favourite word (โDOGโ, โCATโ, โSUNโ).
- Ask, โCan you build the number of people in our family?โ or โHow many kids are here today? Letโs build that number.โ
- For older children, use plasticine to build math symbols (+, โ, ร, =) and small arrays (like a 3 ร 4 grid of dots) to show multiplication in a tactile way.
References
- Sutapa, P., Suharjana, S., Ndayisenga, J., & Salleh, M. (2021). Improving of fine motor skills through plasticine playing and clay in early childhood. Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry, 12(7), 2427โ2436. https://www.tojqi.net/index.php/journal/article/view/4115ย
- Darizal, D., Sutapa, P., Suhartini, B., Sabillah, M. I., & Annasai, F. (2023). The effect of playdough play on early childhood fine motor improvement in Yogyakarta National Kindergarten. International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and Analysis, 6(3), 879โ883. https://doi.org/10.47191/ijmra/v6-i3-04ย
- Li, Y., Wu, X., Ye, D., Zuo, J., & Liu, L. (2025). Research progress on the relationship between fine motor skills and academic ability in children: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Frontiers in Sports and Active Living, 6, 1386967. https://doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2024.1386967ย
- Suggate, S. P., Karle, V. L., Kipfelsberger, T., & Stoeger, H. (2025). Keep the hands in mind: A meta-analysis of correlations between fine motor skills and reading, writing, mathematics, and cognitive development in children and adolescents. Educational Research Review, 49, 100748.ย https://doi.org/10.1016/j.edurev.2025.100748ย
- Bosgraaf, L., Spreen, M., Pattiselanno, K., & van Hooren, S. (2024). Affect regulating art therapy for children and adolescents experiencing psychosocial problems. International Journal of Art Therapy, 29(2), 88โ96.ย https://doi.org/10.1080/17454832.2023.2208198
- Keyes, H., Gradidge, S., Forwood, S. E., Gibson, N., Harvey, A., Kis, E., Mutsatsa, K., Ownsworth, R., Roeloffs, S., & Zawisza, M. (2024). Creating arts and crafting positively predicts subjective wellbeing. Frontiers in Public Health, 12, 1417997.ย https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1417997
- Kazandjian, N., Harandian, K., Dufour, M.-M., Chichinina, E. A., Desmurget, M., & Pagani, L. S. (2025). Tracing the cognitiveโmotor connection: Prospective-longitudinal associations between early parentโtoddler literacy activities and subsequent gross motor skills at school entry. Children, 12(11), 1431. https://doi.org/10.3390/children12111431ย






