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Motor Planning Difficulties

How Motor Planning Difficulties Affect Sensory Development

Motor planning difficulties and sensory development are closely linked: planning a movement depends on clear sensory signals from the body (touch, muscles, joints, balance), and when those are fuzzy, planning new actions is harder. Effortful movement can also lead a child to avoid the very experiences that grow sensory processing. Both respond well to playful, structured support, and a sensory-motor review early is worthwhile if a child avoids new physical activities or seems clumsy.

How Motor Planning Difficulties Affect Sensory Development
Motor Planning & Sensory Development Explained — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

When your child seems to know what they want to do but their body just can't quite organise the steps, sensory development is often quietly tangled up in the story.

In short

Motor planning difficulties — sometimes called dyspraxia or praxis challenges — and sensory development are deeply intertwined. To plan and carry out a movement, a child's brain must first take in and make sense of signals from the body (touch, muscles, joints, balance). When that sensory picture is fuzzy, planning new movements becomes harder; and when movement is effortful, a child gets fewer chances to explore and refine their senses. The good news: both are highly responsive to playful, structured support, and most children make steady progress with the right help.

How motor planning and sensory development influence each other

Motor planning (praxis) is the ability to think out, sequence and carry out an unfamiliar action — like climbing new playground equipment or copying a clapping pattern. It leans heavily on two "hidden" senses:
  • Proprioception — the sense of where your body parts are and how much effort to use. Fuzzy proprioception makes it hard to know how to grade a movement, so actions can look clumsy or too forceful.
  • Vestibular sense — the sense of balance and movement in space. When this is unclear, a child may be unsure how to move safely, so they avoid or over-seek movement.

When these sensory foundations are unreliable, motor planning has weaker information to work with. The reverse is also true: a child who finds movement hard may steer away from messy play, climbing, swinging or new physical games — the very experiences that grow sensory processing. Over time this can look like avoidance, frustration, low confidence, or a child who watches rather than joins in. None of this reflects ability or effort — it reflects a body and brain still learning to talk to each other.

When to seek support

A sensory and motor review is worthwhile if your child consistently avoids new physical activities, seems unusually clumsy or accident-prone, struggles to copy actions or learn multi-step movements, tires quickly during play, or gets frustrated with tasks like dressing, using cutlery or handwriting. Earlier, gentler support tends to build confidence faster — there's no need to wait and see.

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 app or an online form. Our therapists look at how your child's senses and movement planning work together, celebrate genuine strengths, and build a playful, step-by-step plan with you. Explore more about motor planning difficulties, how occupational therapy strengthens sensory and motor skills, and how we understand your child's starting point with the AbilityScore.

Trusted sources

Guidance from the American Occupational Therapy resources via ASHA and AAP (healthychildren.org) on motor and sensory development; WHO (who.int) framing of motor and sensory function; and the WHO Nurturing Care framework on responsive, play-rich early support.

Next step — If your child finds new movements effortful or avoids active play, book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician for a clear sensory-motor profile and a calm, practical plan.

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 whether your child avoids new physical play, seems clumsy or accident-prone, struggles to copy or sequence movements, tires quickly, or gets frustrated with dressing, cutlery or handwriting.

Try this at home

Build in short bursts of 'heavy work' play — pushing a laundry basket, carrying books, animal-walk races. This feeds proprioception and balance, helping your child's body and brain plan movements more smoothly.

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

Is motor planning difficulty the same as a sensory problem?

They are different but closely connected. Motor planning is about thinking out and carrying out movements, while sensory processing is about taking in and making sense of signals like touch, balance and body position. Planning leans on good sensory information, so the two often go hand in hand — and a clinician can look at both together.

Will my child grow out of motor planning difficulties on their own?

Some children do make progress with everyday play, but many benefit from structured, playful support that builds sensory foundations and confidence. There's no need to simply wait and see — a developmental review can map strengths and next steps, and earlier support usually builds confidence faster.

What kind of therapy helps motor planning and sensory development?

Occupational therapy is commonly involved, using play-based activities that strengthen proprioception, balance and movement sequencing. The right plan depends on your individual child, which is why a clinician-led assessment comes first.

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