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Motor Planning Difficulties

Supporting Sensory Development with Motor Planning Difficulties

Support sensory development in a child with motor planning difficulties through rich, predictable proprioceptive (heavy-work), vestibular (balance) and tactile play in a calm space — breaking movements into small, narrated steps and celebrating each attempt. An occupational therapy assessment can tailor the plan.

Supporting Sensory Development with Motor Planning Difficulties
Sensory Support for Motor Planning Difficulties — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Movement and the senses grow together — when planning a movement feels hard, the right sensory foundations make the next try easier.

In short

Supporting sensory development in a child with motor planning difficulties means building rich, predictable sensory experiences — touch, body-awareness (proprioception) and balance (vestibular) — that give the brain the information it needs to plan and sequence movement. The aim is steady, playful practice in a calm, organised environment, not pressure. Small, repeated wins build the confidence that fuels bigger motor learning.

Practical ways to support sensory development

Build body-awareness (proprioception) — this is the sense that tells a child where their body is, and it underpins motor planning.
  • Heavy-work play: pushing a laundry basket, carrying books, animal walks (bear, crab, frog).
  • Squeezes and bear hugs, climbing, jumping on a cushion or trampette.
  • Resistance games — tug-of-war with a towel, kneading dough.

Balance and movement (vestibular)

  • Gentle swinging, rolling, rocking and spinning in play — follow your child's cues and keep it calm.
  • Wobble cushions, balance beams (a taped line on the floor works), stepping-stone games.

Touch and exploration (tactile)

  • Messy play — sand, water, rice, foam — to build tolerance and discrimination.
  • Different textures during dressing and bath time, named aloud.

Make movement plannable

  • Break a task into small steps and narrate them: "first hands here, then push."
  • Keep routines and the play space predictable so the child can focus on the movement, not the surprises.
  • Celebrate the attempt, not just the result — motor planning improves with safe repetition.

When to seek a closer look

If movement, dressing, or everyday tasks stay much harder than for other children the same age, or your child avoids physical play out of frustration, a structured developmental check is worth arranging. An occupational therapy assessment can map your child's sensory profile and tailor a play-based plan — there is no need to wait for things to "sort themselves out."

The Pinnacle way

At Pinnacle Blooms Network, support for motor planning difficulties blends sensory-integration play with everyday motor practice, guided by a clinician who knows your child. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — never from an online read. With 700+ therapists across 70+ centres, the plan is built around your family's daily life.

Trusted sources

Guided by WHO healthy-development principles, the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren.org on play and motor learning, and ASHA and occupational-therapy practice on sensory and motor development.

Next step — book a developmental assessment to map your child's sensory profile and get a play-based plan — 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

Watch for growing frustration or avoidance of physical play, dressing or self-care tasks staying much harder than for peers, or distress with everyday textures and movement — these signal it's time for an occupational therapy check.

Try this at home

Add 'heavy work' to daily routines — let your child carry the shopping, push a laundry basket, or do animal walks before a tricky task. This calms and organises the body, making movement easier to plan.

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

What is the link between sensory development and motor planning?

Motor planning depends on good sensory information — especially proprioception (body-awareness) and vestibular (balance) input. When the brain receives clear, well-organised sensory signals, it can plan and sequence movement more easily. Building these senses through play strengthens the foundation for coordinated movement.

What is 'heavy work' and why does it help?

Heavy work means activities that push, pull, lift or carry — like carrying books, pushing a basket, or animal walks. It gives strong proprioceptive input that helps a child feel where their body is, which calms the nervous system and supports better movement planning.

Should I push my child to keep trying when movement is hard?

Encourage gently, but never with pressure. Break tasks into small steps, narrate them, and celebrate every attempt rather than only the result. Motor planning improves with safe, low-stress repetition — frustration slows learning, while playful success builds it.

When should I seek a professional assessment?

If movement, dressing or everyday tasks remain much harder than for other children the same age, or your child avoids physical play from frustration, arrange a developmental check. An occupational therapy assessment can map the sensory profile and tailor a plan — there's no need to wait.

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