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Motor Planning Difficulties

Common Myths About Motor Planning Difficulties

Motor planning difficulty (dyspraxia) is when a child knows what they want to do but struggles to plan and sequence the movement. Common myths — that it's laziness, low intelligence, mere clumsiness children outgrow, or fixable by random practice alone — delay support. The truth: it's real, common, unrelated to cleverness, and very responsive to structured, clinician-guided help.

Common Myths About Motor Planning Difficulties
The Truth Behind Motor Planning Myths — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

"He's just lazy" or "she'll grow out of it" — the myths around motor planning quietly delay the very support that helps most.

In short

Motor planning difficulty (sometimes called dyspraxia) is when a child knows what they want to do but their brain struggles to plan and sequence the how — so a familiar action like buttoning a shirt or climbing stairs comes out clumsy, slow or inconsistent. It is not laziness, low intelligence, or poor parenting, and it is far more common and more supportable than the myths suggest. Understanding what's true frees families to act early and kindly.

Common myths, gently corrected

Myth 1 — "It's just clumsiness, he'll grow out of it." Some children do mature, but persistent motor-planning difficulty rarely resolves on its own — it tends to surface again as new skills (handwriting, sport, self-care) are demanded. Early support builds smoother foundations.

Myth 2 — "It means my child isn't clever." Motor planning and intelligence are different systems. Many children with motor-planning difficulty are bright, imaginative and verbally able — the gap is in executing a movement, not in thinking.

Myth 3 — "She's being lazy or not trying." A child who repeats the same task perfectly one day and fumbles it the next isn't choosing to — inconsistency is a hallmark of the difficulty itself, not a lack of effort. Praising effort matters more than criticising the outcome.

Myth 4 — "More practice alone will fix it." Random repetition can frustrate. What helps is structured, broken-down practice with the right cues — the heart of occupational and physiotherapy approaches.

Myth 5 — "It only affects sport and PE." It can touch speech (oral motor planning), dressing, mealtimes, handwriting and even confidence and friendships — which is why a whole-child view matters.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under the care of qualified clinicians — never from an online form or an app. From there, a tailored plan — often blending occupational therapy with everyday practice — helps your child move from frustration to flow. Learn more about motor planning difficulties and how support is shaped.

Trusted sources

American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on developmental coordination and motor development; CDC developmental milestones; WHO ICF framework on functioning and participation.

Next step — Curious where your child stands? Book a developmental check 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

Notice if your child knows what they want to do but the movement comes out clumsy, slow or inconsistent — doing a task well one day and fumbling it the next, struggling with dressing, handwriting or new physical skills despite trying.

Try this at home

Break tasks into small, clear steps and praise the effort, not just the result. Saying "first arm in, then the other" while dressing gives your child a planning roadmap their brain can follow.

Trusted sources

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

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 being clumsy?

Occasional clumsiness is normal in all children. Motor planning difficulty is a persistent pattern where the brain struggles to plan and sequence movements, so familiar tasks come out inconsistently — well one day, awkwardly the next — across many activities.

Does motor planning difficulty mean my child isn't intelligent?

No. Motor planning and intelligence are separate. Many children with motor-planning difficulty are bright and verbally able — the challenge is in executing a movement smoothly, not in thinking or understanding.

Will my child simply grow out of it?

Some children mature, but persistent difficulties rarely resolve fully on their own and often resurface as new skills like handwriting or sport are demanded. Early, structured support builds smoother foundations and confidence.

Can therapy really help motor planning?

Yes. Structured occupational and physiotherapy approaches break skills into clear steps with the right cues, which works far better than random repetition. A clinician can shape a plan to your child's specific needs.

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