Motor Planning Difficulties
Treatment & Therapy Options for Motor Planning Difficulties
Motor planning difficulties respond strongly to therapy. Occupational therapy with a motor-learning, task-specific approach is the cornerstone, supported by physiotherapy, speech therapy where speech sequencing is affected, and sensory-informed strategies — with playful daily practice at home and school making gains last.
When your child knows what they want to do but their body seems to get stuck on the 'how' — that gap has a name, and it responds beautifully to the right support.
In short
Motor planning difficulties — the challenge of conceiving, organising and carrying out a new sequence of movements — are highly responsive to therapy. The cornerstone is occupational therapy with a motor-learning approach, often alongside physiotherapy and speech therapy where speech-sound sequencing is affected. The goal is never to drill perfection; it is to build your child's ability to plan, start and complete everyday actions with growing independence.What helps, and why
Motor planning (praxis) is the bridge between an idea and a smooth, organised action. When that bridge is shaky, a child may know how to climb the slide yet fumble the steps, or struggle to copy a new dance move, dress, or form letters. Effective, evidence-based options include:- Occupational therapy (OT) — the lead intervention. Therapists use task-specific, repeated practice, breaking new movements into achievable steps and gradually fading support so the child internalises the plan.
- Cognitive approaches (e.g. CO-OP-style strategies) — your child learns a simple 'goal–plan–do–check' routine, which builds self-directed problem-solving that transfers to new tasks.
- Physiotherapy — for gross-motor sequencing, balance and coordination of the whole body.
- Speech therapy — when sequencing affects speech sounds (motor-speech / praxis of speech), structured sound-sequencing practice helps.
- Sensory-informed strategies and play — so the child reads their body and the environment more reliably before they move.
- Home and school carry-over — short, frequent, playful practice embedded in daily routines is what makes gains stick.
Progress is measured in everyday wins: doing up buttons, riding a trike, copying letters, joining in PE — not in test scores alone.
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. From there your child's therapists build one joined-up plan. Explore understanding motor planning difficulties, how occupational therapy builds praxis step by step, and how the AbilityScore is established so progress is measured the same way every visit.Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on developmental coordination and motor concerns; American Speech-Language-Hearing Association resources on motor-speech sequencing; WHO ICF framework for functioning and participation.Next step — See exactly where your child's planning sits today — book an assessment 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
Watch for whether your child can learn and repeat a NEW movement sequence over time — not just one tricky task. Steady transfer to dressing, play, drawing and PE is the real sign therapy is working.
Try this at home
Break new tasks into tiny steps and use simple words: 'first, then, last.' Practise the same step playfully for a few minutes daily — frequent short goes beat one long session.
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
Which therapy is most important for motor planning difficulties?
Occupational therapy is usually the lead intervention, using task-specific, step-by-step practice that helps your child plan and carry out new movements. Physiotherapy and speech therapy are added when whole-body coordination or speech-sound sequencing are involved.
Can children outgrow motor planning difficulties on their own?
Some children make gradual gains, but targeted therapy reliably speeds progress and prevents knock-on effects on confidence, schoolwork and play. Early, structured support helps the planning skill generalise to many everyday tasks.
How long does therapy take to show results?
Many families see everyday wins within a few weeks to months, depending on the child and how consistently practice is woven into daily routines. Your clinician will set clear, measurable goals and review progress regularly.