Catching and Throwing
Catching and Throwing: Home Activities for Your Child
Build catching and throwing through short, playful turns at home: start by rolling a large soft ball close up, cue 'ready hands', toss to chest height, and practise throwing into a big target like a basket. Keep it joyful and easy to succeed, adding challenge gradually. Most children simply need lots of relaxed practice.
A ball tossed between you and your child is more than a game — it is balance, timing, eyes and hands all learning to work as a team.
In short
Catching and throwing build on big-muscle coordination, hand-eye timing and confidence — and they grow best through short, playful turns at home. Start large, slow and close; make it easy to succeed, then gently add challenge. The goal is laughter and repetition, not perfection.Activities you can try at home
Start big and slow (easiest first)- Roll a large ball back and forth while seated facing each other — rolling comes before catching.
- Use a soft, light ball, balloon or rolled-up socks — slow-moving objects give little hands more time to react.
- Stand close (an arm's length) so a gentle underarm toss almost lands in their hands.
Build catching
- Cue "ready hands" — cupped hands out, eyes on the ball.
- Toss to chest height, straight at them, with a clear "catch!" so they can time it.
- Catching into a bucket, scarf or towel held between two hands counts as a win — celebrate it.
Build throwing
- Practise throwing into a big target first: a laundry basket, a cardboard box, a hoop on the floor.
- Underarm tosses come before overarm throws — let them master the easy one.
- Step the target back a little at a time as they get stronger.
Keep it joyful
- Two or three short bursts a day beats one long session.
- Name what they did well — "lovely catch!" — far more than what they missed.
- Mix in bubbles to pop, beanbags to lob, or balloons to keep up; variety keeps interest alive.
When to check in
Children develop these skills at very different paces, and lots of practice is the main ingredient. If your child seems much more clumsy than friends of the same age, frequently trips or drops things, avoids ball games entirely, or you simply have a niggling worry, a friendly developmental check is a sensible next step — not a cause for alarm.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 activity guide or an online check. If you'd like a structured view of your child's movement skills, our team can map a baseline with the AbilityScore®, build on the foundations of catching and throwing, and tailor playful practice through occupational therapy where helpful.Trusted sources
Guided by child-development milestone guidance from the CDC's "Learn the Signs. Act Early." programme, the American Academy of Pediatrics via HealthyChildren.org, and developmental-coordination resources aligned with NICE guidance.Next step — for a friendly chat or to book a developmental assessment, reach the Pinnacle team on WhatsApp: +91 91001 81181.
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
Check in if your child is much more clumsy than same-age friends, trips or drops things often, avoids ball games entirely, or your worry persists despite plenty of relaxed practice.
Try this at home
Roll before you throw: a large ball rolled back and forth on the floor teaches the same eyes-and-hands teamwork with no pressure to catch.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · 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
At what age should my child catch a ball?
Children vary widely. Many begin catching a large, slow ball against the chest around 3 to 4 years, with neater two-hand catches developing later. Rolling and big-target throwing come earlier. Pace matters less than relaxed, regular practice.
My child keeps missing catches — am I doing something wrong?
Not at all. Misses are part of learning. Move closer, slow the ball down, use a balloon or soft ball, and cue 'ready hands'. Celebrate any catch into a bucket or towel. Frequent short turns build skill faster than long sessions.
Should rolling come before throwing and catching?
Yes — rolling a ball back and forth while seated is the gentlest first step. It teaches eyes-and-hands timing without the pressure of catching a moving object, and it gives quick, confidence-building success.
When should I be concerned about my child's coordination?
If your child is noticeably more clumsy than same-age friends, trips or drops things often, avoids ball games, or you simply have a lingering worry, a friendly developmental check is sensible — reassurance, not alarm.