Logistics
What a typical therapy week looks like
A typical therapy week is usually 2 to 4 sessions of around 45 to 60 minutes in the domain your child needs, plus a few simple home activities folded into daily routines. The exact schedule is set after a structured assessment and adjusts as your child grows, with consistency mattering more than intensity.
Every family wants to picture it before they begin — so here is what a real therapy week tends to look like.
In short
A typical therapy week is calm, predictable and built around your child — usually 2 to 4 sessions, each about 45 to 60 minutes, in the domain your child needs most (speech, occupational, behavioural or physical therapy). Sessions are short, playful and goal-led, with simple home activities woven into everyday routines so progress continues between visits. Your exact schedule is shaped at assessment, not fixed by a formula — frequency rises or eases as your child grows.What a week usually holds
The sessions themselves- 2–4 visits per week is common for an active therapy goal; some children attend daily for a focused block, others weekly for gentle maintenance.
- Each session runs roughly 45–60 minutes, including a few minutes for the therapist to update you.
- Sessions feel like guided play — turn-taking games, movement, sensory or speech activities — never drills.
Around the sessions
- A short, doable home plan: a handful of activities folded into bath-time, mealtimes, the school run or bedtime stories.
- Brief check-ins with your therapist on what's working and what to adjust.
- Periodic review points where progress is mapped and the plan is fine-tuned.
How the week is decided
Frequency and mix of therapies are set after a structured developmental assessment — not by guesswork. A child with focused speech goals may have a very different week from one working across motor and behaviour goals. The aim is enough repetition to build a skill, without overwhelming your child or your family's routine.
Settling into the rhythm
The first two or three weeks are about your child feeling safe and your family finding the routine that fits work, school and siblings. Many centres offer flexible slots and online sessions where suitable, so therapy supports your week rather than straining it. Consistency matters more than intensity — a steady, gentle week sustained over months does more than an exhausting one that can't last.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — your child's exact weekly plan is built from that assessment, never from a one-size template. Across [70+ centres in 4 states](/), 700+ therapists support 4.95 lakh+ families with structured, goal-led weeks. Explore how a plan is shaped through the AbilityScore®, and see what individual sessions involve in speech therapy.Trusted sources
Guidance on family-centred, routine-based early intervention reflects the WHO and UNICEF Nurturing Care Framework, the American Academy of Pediatrics via HealthyChildren.org, and ASHA recommendations on the value of caregiver-embedded practice between sessions.Next step — book a developmental assessment to receive your child's personalised weekly plan; reach the Pinnacle team on WhatsApp at +91 91001 81181.
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 how your child settles into the routine over the first few weeks; tiredness, distress or skipped home activities are signals to tell your therapist so the week can be eased or rebalanced rather than pushed.
Try this at home
Pick one home activity and anchor it to something you already do daily — bath-time words or stair-climbing counts. Tiny, repeated moments beat long sessions you can't sustain.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · 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
How many therapy sessions per week is normal?
Most active goals involve 2 to 4 sessions a week, each about 45 to 60 minutes. Some children attend daily for a focused block, others weekly for gentle maintenance — the right number is decided at assessment and adjusts over time.
How long does each therapy session last?
Sessions typically run 45 to 60 minutes, including a short update for you at the end. They feel like guided play rather than drills, which keeps young children engaged.
Do I have to do anything at home between sessions?
Yes, but it's light and practical — a few activities woven into bath-time, meals or bedtime. This everyday practice is where much of the progress happens, and consistency matters more than long effort.
Who decides my child's weekly schedule?
The frequency and mix of therapies are set after a structured developmental assessment by qualified clinicians, then reviewed and fine-tuned as your child grows. It is never a fixed template.