Achievement & Growth
Achievement & Growth in the ICF: Mapping to d155
In the ICF, Achievement & Growth maps to the Learning and applying knowledge chapter (Activities & Participation, d1) — specifically d155, Acquiring skills. In early childhood this represents the functional capacity to acquire, integrate and apply new skills through engagement and learning-through-doing. It is an activity-and-participation construct, measured by what a child does in everyday contexts, not a body-function impairment.
Where a child's earliest acts of focusing, attending and learning-through-doing live in the ICF — that is where Achievement & Growth is anchored.
In short
In the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), Achievement & Growth maps most directly to the Learning and applying knowledge chapter (Activities & Participation, domain d1), and specifically to d155 — Acquiring skills. In early childhood this captures the developing capacity to acquire, integrate and apply new skills through sustained engagement — the functional substrate of focused activity, attention and learning-through-doing. It is an activity-and-participation construct, not a body-function impairment.The ICF mapping in detail
The ICF organises functioning into Body Functions/Structures and Activities & Participation. Acquiring skills (d155) sits within Learning and applying knowledge (d1), alongside neighbouring codes such as basic learning (d130–d145) and focusing attention (d160) and thinking (d163). For a young child, acquiring skills describes the observable, real-world process of developing both basic and complex competencies — manipulating objects, mastering sequences, and consolidating early academic and self-management behaviours through repetition and play.Framing Achievement & Growth at the activity-and-participation level matters methodologically: it directs measurement toward what a child does in everyday contexts (capacity and performance), rather than toward an inferred internal deficit. This aligns with the biopsychosocial logic of the ICF and with early-childhood ICF-CY usage, where contextual and environmental factors are weighted as facilitators or barriers to skill acquisition. For longitudinal early-childhood work, this domain is best read together with attention (d160) and play-based participation codes to capture growth trajectories rather than single-point performance.
The Pinnacle way
This is general, definitional information for professional use — 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 framework links ICF activity-and-participation domains to individualised developmental plans, drawing on [child development services](/) and, where indicated, occupational therapy to support skill acquisition through structured play.Trusted sources
The WHO ICF and its Children & Youth version describe d155 (Acquiring skills) within the Learning and applying knowledge chapter; WHO guidance frames functioning across body functions and activities-and-participation within a biopsychosocial model.Next step — To map a child's Achievement & Growth profile against ICF activity-and-participation domains within a structured clinical framework, partner with Pinnacle Blooms Network for a developmental assessment.
What to watch
Read d155 alongside focusing attention (d160) and play-based participation codes; weight environmental factors as facilitators or barriers, and capture growth trajectories rather than single-point capacity.
Try this at home
When documenting early-childhood functioning, code Acquiring skills (d155) at both capacity and performance levels to distinguish what a child can do in a structured setting from what they do in everyday contexts.
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 exact ICF code does Achievement & Growth map to?
It maps most directly to d155 (Acquiring skills), within the Learning and applying knowledge chapter (d1) of the Activities & Participation component.
Is Achievement & Growth a Body Function or an Activity domain in the ICF?
It is an Activities & Participation construct, not a Body Functions impairment. This directs measurement toward what a child does in real-world contexts — capacity and performance — rather than an inferred internal deficit.
Why use the ICF-CY framing for early childhood?
The Children & Youth derivation of the ICF captures the developmental and contextual nature of skill acquisition, weighting environmental and personal factors as facilitators or barriers to growth.