Pinnacle Pinnacle® ASK

Developmental Coordination Disorder

Can a Child with DCD Attend a Regular School?

Yes — a child with DCD can and should attend a regular school. DCD affects movement coordination, not intelligence, and most children thrive in mainstream classrooms with a few simple adjustments to writing, PE and self-care. A clinician confirms DCD and helps plan school supports.

Can a Child with DCD Attend a Regular School?
Yes — Children with DCD Thrive in Regular School — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Yes — and the answer is genuinely yes. A child with Developmental Coordination Disorder belongs in a regular classroom, and with the right understanding around them, they thrive there.

In short

Absolutely yes. Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD, sometimes called dyspraxia) affects how a child plans and coordinates movement — buttoning a shirt, holding a pencil, catching a ball — but it does not affect intelligence. Most children with DCD attend mainstream school very successfully. What helps is not a different school, but a few thoughtful adjustments so that motor difficulty never gets mistaken for lack of ability or effort.

What helps in the classroom

Children with DCD are usually bright, curious and capable — they simply need the physical demands eased so their thinking can shine. Practical, low-cost supports include:
  • Writing — a pencil grip, slightly more time, or the option to type or use voice for longer tasks
  • Seating — feet flat, table at the right height, fewer distractions nearby
  • PE and play — breaking skills into small steps, focusing on participation over performance, never singling a child out
  • Self-care — Velcro shoes, easy-fasten clothing, a little extra time for changing or packing up
  • Confidence — praising effort and ideas, not just neat handwriting, so a child never feels "clumsy" defines them

Many of these can be written into a simple school support plan, agreed between parents, teachers and your therapist.

The science, briefly

DCD affects around 5–6% of school-aged children — roughly one or two in most classrooms. International EACD guidelines are clear that DCD is a coordination difficulty, not a learning-capacity one, and that task-focused therapy plus reasonable classroom accommodations lead to strong school outcomes. Occupational therapy in particular helps children build practical skills for handwriting, dressing and play, while the school adjusts demands around them.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an online form. Our occupational therapists assess exactly which movement tasks are hard for your child, build a step-by-step plan, and work with you to suggest school adjustments that fit. The goal is simple: your child in a regular classroom, learning, joining in and feeling capable.

Trusted sources

European Academy of Childhood Disability (EACD) guidelines on DCD; WHO guidance on developmental coordination disorders; American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) on motor skills and school support.

Next step — Let's give your child's school the right tools. Book an occupational therapy assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.

This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

What to watch

Watch for a child avoiding writing, PE or self-care tasks, growing frustrated, or saying they feel "stupid" or "clumsy" — these are signs the classroom needs adjusting around them, not that the school is wrong for them.

Try this at home

Build motor skills through play, not pressure: threading beads, playdough, simple obstacle games or helping cook. Five to ten enjoyable minutes a day strengthens coordination far more gently than drilling handwriting.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days

This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.

Frequently asked

Does DCD affect a child's intelligence?

No. Developmental Coordination Disorder affects the planning and coordination of movement — like writing, dressing or catching a ball — not intelligence or learning capacity. Many children with DCD are bright and academically capable.

Will my child need a special school?

Almost always no. Most children with DCD do very well in mainstream school with a few simple adjustments, such as extra time for writing, easy-fasten clothing or step-by-step support in PE.

What school adjustments help a child with DCD?

Helpful supports include a pencil grip or typing option, extra time for written and self-care tasks, the right seating, breaking PE skills into small steps, and praising effort and ideas rather than neatness.

Can therapy help my child cope at school?

Yes. Occupational therapy builds practical skills for handwriting, dressing and play, and your therapist can suggest classroom adjustments that fit your child — so movement difficulty never holds back their learning.

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