Motor Planning Difficulties
Your Child's AbilityScore for Motor Planning: What to Do Next
An AbilityScore is a clinician-administered snapshot of your child's current skills, not a pass-or-fail grade or diagnosis. For motor planning difficulties it shows where to begin therapy. The next step is to review the score with a Pinnacle clinician and build a focused, re-measurable plan.
An AbilityScore is a starting line, not a verdict — and for a child with motor planning difficulties, it tells us exactly where to begin.
In short
Your child's AbilityScore is a clinician-administered snapshot of where their skills sit today, measured against their own baseline — not a pass-or-fail grade and not a diagnosis. For motor planning difficulties, it helps the clinical team see which everyday actions (dressing, climbing stairs, holding a pencil, sequencing a multi-step task) need support, and how to build a plan. The next step is simple: review the score with your Pinnacle clinician and turn it into a clear, doable therapy plan.What the score actually tells you
Motor planning — sometimes called praxis — is the brain's ability to think out, sequence and carry out a new physical action. A child who struggles here often knows what they want to do, but the steps don't come together smoothly. The AbilityScore captures this across several skill areas so the team can see:- Strengths to build on — what your child already does well, which becomes the foundation for new skills.
- Emerging skills — actions that are almost there and respond quickly to the right practice.
- Priority areas — where focused occupational therapy and motor-planning support will make daily life easier.
A score is most useful when re-measured over time: progress shows up both in everyday wins (managing buttons, a smoother morning routine, a new playground skill) and in objective comparison against your child's own earlier baseline.
What to do next
1. Book a clinician review of the score so you understand it in plain language — what it means for your child specifically. 2. Agree a focused plan — usually occupational therapy with motor-planning goals broken into small, achievable steps. 3. Practise the small things daily at home, guided by your therapist, and re-measure at agreed points to confirm the plan is working.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under the care of a qualified clinician — never from an online number alone. With 25 million+ therapy sessions and 4.95 lakh+ families served across 70+ centres, the approach is always the same: measure honestly, plan clearly, and grow your child's abilities step by step. Start here — what the AbilityScore is and how it's calculated, explore occupational therapy for motor planning, or learn how we work at [Pinnacle Blooms Network](/).Trusted sources
World Health Organization developmental guidance; American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org) on motor milestones; American Occupational Therapy guidance via ASHA-aligned practice; Pinnacle Blooms Network clinical studies.Next step — Turn the number into a plan: book an assessment review with a Pinnacle occupational therapist.
What to watch
Watch for whether everyday actions get easier over time — dressing, stairs, pencil grip, following multi-step instructions. Steady progress against your child's own baseline matters more than any single number; flag any loss of a skill they once had to your clinician.
Try this at home
Break new physical tasks into tiny named steps and do them together: "First foot in, then pull up, then button." Praise each attempt, not just success. A few minutes of this guided practice daily builds the planning pathways the score is measuring.
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 the AbilityScore a diagnosis?
No. The AbilityScore is a clinician-administered structured assessment that shows where your child's skills sit against their own baseline. It is not a diagnosis — any diagnosis is formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under a qualified clinician's care.
Does a lower score mean my child won't improve?
Not at all. The score is simply a starting line. It tells the clinical team where to focus, and progress is measured against your child's own baseline — so even quiet improvement becomes visible over time.
What therapy helps motor planning difficulties?
Occupational therapy with motor-planning (praxis) goals is the usual focus, breaking new actions into small, sequenced steps. Your clinician will tailor the plan to your child's specific AbilityScore profile.
How often should the score be re-measured?
Your clinician will agree review points with you. Re-measuring lets you see progress objectively against your child's earlier baseline and confirm the plan is working, rather than guessing.