Motor Planning Difficulties vs Social Communication Difficulties
Motor Planning vs Social Communication Difficulties
Motor planning difficulties are about the body — a child knows what they want to do but struggles to plan, sequence and carry out movements like buttoning, drawing or climbing. Social communication difficulties are about connection — sharing attention, reading faces and tone, taking turns and using language socially. Motor planning is 'I want to but my body can't organise the steps'; social communication is 'connecting and sharing meaning is tricky'. They can overlap in the same child, which is why a whole-child screening matters.
Two different puzzles — one is about how the body plans movement, the other about how a child connects and shares meaning with people.
In short
Motor planning difficulties (sometimes called dyspraxia) are about the body — a child knows what they want to do but struggles to plan, sequence and carry out the movements smoothly, like doing up buttons, riding a tricycle or copying an action. Social communication difficulties are about connection — how a child shares attention, reads faces and tone, takes conversational turns and uses language socially. In short: motor planning is 'I want to do it but my body can't organise the steps'; social communication is 'I find connecting and sharing meaning with others tricky'. They look different, but they can overlap in the same child.How they differ in everyday life
A child with motor planning difficulties may seem clumsy, avoid puzzles, building or drawing, find new physical tasks much harder than other children their age, and need lots of repetition before a movement becomes easy. They often understand exactly what to do — the gap is in executing the steps in the right order. You might notice it with cutlery, dressing, climbing play equipment, or speech sounds (when the mouth muscles are hard to sequence).A child with social communication difficulties may make less eye contact, not point to share interest, find back-and-forth conversation hard, miss the unwritten 'rules' of play, take language very literally, or struggle to start and keep up interactions. The challenge is in the social use of communication, not in the physical movement itself.
Many children show a little of both, and the two can influence each other — for example, a child who finds gestures physically hard may also find it harder to wave, point or use body language to connect. That is exactly why a proper look at the whole child matters.
When to seek a check
There is no need to wait and worry. If your young child is noticeably behind peers in coordination, dressing and self-help skills, OR in sharing attention, gestures and back-and-forth interaction, a gentle developmental screening can tell you which areas need support — and often it is both strengths and a few areas to nurture. Early support works beautifully because young brains are wonderfully adaptable.The Pinnacle way
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, never from an app or form. Our team observes how your child moves, plans, connects and communicates, then recommends the right blend — drawing on occupational therapy for motor planning and speech therapy where social communication and language are part of the picture. Learn more about motor planning difficulties.Trusted sources
The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association on social communication and pragmatic language; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on motor and developmental milestones in young children.Next step — Unsure which describes your child? Book a developmental screening and let a clinician map your child's strengths and gently identify where support helps most.
What to watch
Motor planning: a child who knows what to do but seems clumsy, avoids drawing/building, struggles with dressing, cutlery or new physical tasks, and needs lots of repetition. Social communication: less eye contact, not pointing to share, difficulty with back-and-forth interaction, missing play 'rules' or very literal language. A child may show signs of both.
Try this at home
Play that blends both: build a simple block tower together while taking turns and chatting — 'my turn, your turn'. It gently practises sequencing movements AND sharing attention, and shows you which feels harder for your child.
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
Can a child have both motor planning and social communication difficulties?
Yes. Many children show a mix of both, and they can influence each other — for example, a child who finds gestures physically hard may also find it harder to wave or point to connect. A whole-child screening looks at all areas together so support fits your child.
Is motor planning difficulty the same as being clumsy?
Not quite. Occasional clumsiness is normal. Motor planning difficulty is when a child consistently struggles to plan and sequence movements they want to make — like dressing, drawing or new physical tasks — well beyond what's expected for their age.
Which professional helps with each?
Occupational therapists and physiotherapists typically support motor planning, while speech-language therapists support social communication. At Pinnacle, a clinician matches the right blend after observing your child.