Collection: Scissors for Dyspraxia, Dysgraphia and Fine-Motor Needs

Our SEND scissors help children with dyspraxia, dysgraphia and ADHD develop cutting skills with less frustration. Easi-grip, long-loop, self-opening and left-handed designs reduce the grip strength, coordination and finger isolation demands that standard scissors place on neurodiverse learners.

Read moreRead less

Cutting with scissors looks simple, but it is one of the most demanding fine-motor tasks in a primary classroom. It asks a child to isolate finger movements, grip with the right amount of force, track a line with their eyes, and coordinate both hands at once. For children with dyspraxia (developmental coordination disorder), dysgraphia or ADHD, any one of those sub-skills can be the sticking point - and standard safety scissors often make the problem worse, not better.

The scissors in this collection are specifically chosen for SEND learners. They include self-opening designs that spring back after each cut, long-loop handles that recruit the whole hand for stability, ultra-lightweight easi-grip scissors for children with very weak grip, and dedicated left-handed pairs with properly reversed blades so left-handers can actually see the cutting line.

What makes these scissors suitable for SEND learners?

Three design features do most of the work. Self-opening springs remove the hardest half of the cutting cycle - the re-opening phase that wears children out. Easi-grip and long-loop handles replace the need for precise finger isolation with a whole-hand squeeze, which is far more achievable for children with dyspraxia or low muscle tone. Reversed left-handed blades move the cutting edge so left-handed children can see what they are cutting, rather than guessing.

Which scissors help children with dyspraxia and fine-motor difficulties?

PETA Long Loop Scissors are the most widely recommended option for dyspraxia. The extended loop lets the child use their middle, ring and little finger together for strength, while the index finger guides the cut. For children with very weak hands, the PETA Easi-Grip Scissors or Mini Easi-Grip Scissors spring open automatically, so only a gentle squeeze is needed. Self-opening scissors are a good mid-step once a child has built some strength but still tires quickly.

How do I choose scissors for a left-handed child?

A left-handed child needs scissors with genuinely reversed blades, not just mirrored handles. When the blades are the wrong way round, the top blade blocks the cutting line and the child has to compensate by rotating their wrist - which looks like clumsiness but is actually a design problem. Our scissors for left-handed people collection covers easi-grip, long-loop and standard options with correctly reversed blades, and is worth checking alongside our wider being left-handed range.

Scissors for SENCOs, teachers and school orders

SENCOs ordering for an intervention kit or whole-class scissor-skills programme will usually need a small mixed set: a pair of long-loop scissors, an easi-grip pair, a self-opening pair and a left-handed pair. That covers the most common SEND needs in a Key Stage 1 or Key Stage 2 classroom. We offer 30-day credit accounts for schools and organisations and free UK delivery on orders over £100, so building a classroom kit is straightforward.

 

Need advice? Call us to have a chat - 01394 671 818 or email us hello@thedyslexiashop.co.uk

Frequently asked questions

What are SEND scissors and how are they different from normal scissors?

SEND scissors are specially designed scissors that reduce the grip strength, finger isolation and coordination demands of standard scissors. Common SEND features include self-opening springs, long-loop handles, ultra-lightweight easi-grip bodies and reversed blades for left-handers. They suit children with dyspraxia, dysgraphia, ADHD, weak hand strength or motor planning difficulties.

Which scissors are best for a child with dyspraxia?

Long-loop scissors are widely recommended for dyspraxia because they let the child use their middle, ring and little finger together for strength, while the index finger guides the cut. For children with weaker grip or poor finger isolation, self-opening easi-grip scissors are often the better starting point. Many occupational therapists suggest starting with easi-grip and progressing to long-loop as grip strength improves.

Do self-opening scissors really help children who struggle to cut?

Yes. Self-opening scissors use a small spring to re-open the blades automatically after each cut, so the child only has to do the squeezing half of the cutting cycle. This removes the step that most children with dyspraxia, dysgraphia or low muscle tone find hardest. Children build confidence quickly because they can actually finish a cut without their hand tiring halfway through.

Are left-handed scissors really necessary, or can a left-handed child use any pair?

Proper left-handed scissors are genuinely necessary for cutting along a line. On right-handed scissors the top blade sits on the wrong side for a left-hander, hiding the cutting line and forcing the child to rotate their wrist awkwardly. Reversed left-handed blades keep the cutting line visible and make the action feel natural. This is particularly important for children already managing dyspraxia or dysgraphia.

What age should a child be able to use scissors?

Most children begin practising scissor skills from around age three, with more accurate cutting developing between ages four and six. Children with dyspraxia, dysgraphia or ADHD often take longer to master it, and that is completely normal. Easi-grip or self-opening designs can be introduced earlier because they need far less hand strength and fewer coordination steps than standard scissors. [UNVERIFIED - please check typical age ranges against your preferred OT source]

Do you offer scissors for SENCOs, schools and bulk orders?

Yes. We work with SENCOs, SEND teachers, occupational therapists and trust buyers across the UK. Schools and organisations can set up a 30-day credit account, and UK orders over £100 ship free. A typical classroom SEND scissor kit includes long-loop, easi-grip, self-opening and left-handed pairs so every child in the class has a scissor that matches their grip and hand dominance.

How do scissor skills link to handwriting and dysgraphia?

Scissor skills and handwriting draw on the same underlying fine-motor foundations: grip strength, finger isolation, bilateral coordination and in-hand manipulation. Children with dysgraphia often find both tasks effortful for the same reasons. Building up scissor skills with supportive designs helps develop the hand control that later supports neater, less tiring handwriting, which is why many occupational therapists use cutting activities as part of a handwriting programme.