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Hand Measurements Tracing Activity
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Paste this activity's link or code into your existing LMS (Google Classroom, Canvas, Teams, Schoology, Moodle, etc.).
Students can open and work on the activity right away, with no student login required.
You'll still be able to track student progress and results from your teacher account.
Information
Description
What It Is:
This Hand Measurements worksheet is a clean and simple portrait-oriented activity sheet designed for young learners. It features a large, framed workspace with a small hand icon and clear instructions that guide students to trace their own hands directly onto the page.
Why Use It:
This activity is a fantastic way to develop fine motor skills and hand-eye coordination. Beyond physical development, it introduces early math concepts such as size, scale, and measurement as children observe the physical dimensions of their own hands.
How to Use It:
• Step 1: Have the student place one hand flat inside the large white rectangle with their fingers spread apart.
• Step 2: Carefully guide them to use a pencil to trace the outline of their hand and each finger.
• Step 3: Once traced, encourage students to color their handprint or use a ruler to measure the length of their fingers.
Grade Suitability:
Best for Early Childhood and Kindergarten.
• Younger kids focus area: Improving grip and control while tracing basic shapes.
• Older students focus area: Using the traced hand to practice non-standard measurement units.
Target Users:
This worksheet is ideal for preschool and kindergarten teachers, homeschooling parents, and occupational therapists focusing on motor skill development.
This Hand Measurements worksheet is a clean and simple portrait-oriented activity sheet designed for young learners. It features a large, framed workspace with a small hand icon and clear instructions that guide students to trace their own hands directly onto the page.
Why Use It:
This activity is a fantastic way to develop fine motor skills and hand-eye coordination. Beyond physical development, it introduces early math concepts such as size, scale, and measurement as children observe the physical dimensions of their own hands.
How to Use It:
• Step 1: Have the student place one hand flat inside the large white rectangle with their fingers spread apart.
• Step 2: Carefully guide them to use a pencil to trace the outline of their hand and each finger.
• Step 3: Once traced, encourage students to color their handprint or use a ruler to measure the length of their fingers.
Grade Suitability:
Best for Early Childhood and Kindergarten.
• Younger kids focus area: Improving grip and control while tracing basic shapes.
• Older students focus area: Using the traced hand to practice non-standard measurement units.
Target Users:
This worksheet is ideal for preschool and kindergarten teachers, homeschooling parents, and occupational therapists focusing on motor skill development.




