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Motor Planning Difficulties

Keeping a Child with Motor Planning Difficulties Safe and Thriving

A child with motor planning difficulties knows what they want to do but struggles to sequence the steps. Caregivers keep them safe by making the home predictable and supervising longer than expected, and help them thrive by breaking tasks into small, repeatable steps. Motor planning improves with consistent practice — a clinician-administered assessment shows which steps to target first.

Keeping a Child with Motor Planning Difficulties Safe and Thriving
Motor Planning Difficulties: Keeping Your Child Safe & Thriving — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

The day you understand how your child's brain plans movement, ordinary tasks stop feeling like battles — and your home becomes the safest place to grow.

In short

A child with motor planning difficulties (praxis challenges) knows what they want to do but struggles to sequence the steps to do it — so dressing, stairs, cutlery or playground equipment can take longer and carry more risk. Your two jobs are simple: make the environment predictable and physically safe, and break tasks into small, repeatable steps the child can master one at a time. With patience and consistency, motor planning genuinely improves with practice — this is a skill that grows, not a fixed limit.

Keeping your child safe at home

  • Anticipate the wobble. Motor planning difficulties often mean uneven balance and slower reactions. Use stair gates, non-slip mats in the bath, padded corners and supervised access to climbing furniture.
  • Reduce the steps, not the goal. Lay clothes out in order, use velcro before laces, pre-position the toothbrush. You are removing planning load, not lowering expectations.
  • Slow water, sharp objects and roads need close supervision for longer than you might expect for the age — reaction time, not understanding, is the issue.
  • Name the sequence aloud. "First sit, then foot in, then pull up." Verbal scaffolding gives the brain a script to follow.

Helping your child thrive

  • Practise the same task the same way — repetition builds the motor map. Variety too early overwhelms.
  • Celebrate the attempt, not just the success. Effort is the engine of motor learning.
  • Build in extra time so rushing never forces a fall or a meltdown.
  • Protect play. Climbing, jumping and messy play are therapy in disguise — supervised, they build the very skills that feel hard.

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 a checklist at home. A structured, clinician-administered assessment shows exactly which motor planning steps to target first, so your effort goes where it helps most. Explore motor planning difficulties, see how occupational therapy builds praxis, and understand what the AbilityScore is and how it is calculated.

Trusted sources

WHO ICF framework on functioning and participation; American Occupational Therapy guidance on praxis and daily-living skills via ASHA and AAP healthychildren resources; CDC developmental milestone guidance.

Next step — Bring your child as they are today; a Pinnacle clinician can map their motor planning starting point and give you a plan you can follow at home.

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 the gap between intention and action — your child wants to do a task but freezes, fumbles the sequence, or tires quickly. Note tasks that consistently cause near-falls or frustration, and whether small, repeated practice slowly improves them.

Try this at home

Lay out the next task in order before your child starts it — clothes in sequence, toothbrush ready — and name each step aloud. You are removing planning load, not lowering the goal.

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

Will my child grow out of motor planning difficulties?

Motor planning is a skill that improves with consistent, structured practice rather than something a child simply outgrows. With repetition, scaffolding and the right support, many children gain real independence in daily tasks. A clinician-administered assessment at a Pinnacle centre shows which steps to target first.

Should I do tasks for my child to keep them safe?

Aim to reduce the steps, not the goal. Make the environment safe and supervise closely, but let your child attempt each task with support so the brain keeps building its motor map. Doing everything for them removes the practice that drives progress.

Is motor planning difficulty the same as clumsiness?

They can look similar, but motor planning difficulty is specifically about sequencing the steps of a movement, not just balance or coordination. Because the patterns overlap, a structured clinical assessment is the reliable way to understand what your child needs.

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