Developmental Coordination Disorder
Evidence-based therapy plan for a young child with DCD
An evidence-based DCD therapy plan is task-oriented and activity-focused, delivered in the child's real environments. Cognitive approaches (CO-OP) and Neuromotor Task Training have the strongest support, alongside functional goal-setting, environmental adaptation, parent/teacher coaching and screening for co-occurring conditions. A clinical AbilityScore and diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle centre.
A child with DCD is not clumsy by choice — the movement plan simply hasn't yet been built. An evidence-based plan builds it, task by task.
In short
For a young child with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD; ICD-11 6A04), the strongest evidence supports task-oriented, activity-focused intervention delivered in the child's real environments — home, classroom, playground — rather than isolated bottom-up sensorimotor drills. Plans are goal-led, family- and teacher-partnered, and tied to functional outcomes the child and parents choose. Cognitive approaches such as CO-OP (Cognitive Orientation to daily Occupational Performance) and Neuromotor Task Training (NTT) have the best supporting evidence.What the plan includes
- Functional goal-setting with the family using a structured tool (e.g. goal attainment scaling), targeting tasks that matter: dressing, handwriting, cutlery use, cycling, ball skills.
- Task-specific practice — CO-OP's Goal–Plan–Do–Check problem-solving framework, teaching the child to generate and self-monitor strategies that generalise.
- NTT principles: graded, high-repetition practice of the actual target task with variability and meaningful feedback.
- Environmental and task adaptation — pencil grips, seating, visual scaffolds, broken-down sequences — to enable participation now.
- Parent and teacher coaching so practice is distributed across daily routines, not confined to the therapy room.
- Screening for co-occurring conditions (ADHD, DLD, anxiety) and periodic re-measurement of function.
Bottom-up sensory-integration-only or perceptual-motor-only programmes are not first-line on current evidence.
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 online form. Our occupational therapy and developmental coordination disorder pathways begin with a structured, clinician-administered AbilityScore® baseline before any goals are set.Trusted sources
EACD international clinical practice recommendations on DCD; WHO ICD-11 (6A04); AAP guidance on motor coordination difficulties.Next step — Refer a child for a clinician-led motor and functional assessment to set the first goals.
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 whether chosen functional goals (dressing, handwriting, ball skills) actually improve and generalise to home and school; persistent stagnation, frustration or emerging anxiety warrants review and screening for co-occurring ADHD or language difficulty.
Try this at home
Embed short, repeated practice of the real target task into daily routines rather than abstract exercises — five focused tries at doing up buttons each morning beats a separate 'motor drill'.
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 approaches have the strongest evidence for DCD?
Task-oriented, activity-focused approaches lead the evidence — particularly CO-OP (Cognitive Orientation to daily Occupational Performance) and Neuromotor Task Training (NTT). These target the actual functional skill the child needs rather than isolated underlying components.
Is sensory integration therapy recommended as first-line for DCD?
No. On current evidence, bottom-up sensory-integration-only or perceptual-motor-only programmes are not first-line for DCD. They may have a limited adjunct role, but functional task-oriented intervention is prioritised.
Who should be involved in a young child's DCD plan?
The child and family set the goals; the occupational therapist or physiotherapist leads task-specific practice; and teachers and parents are coached to extend practice into daily routines. Co-occurring conditions are screened and managed alongside.