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Interests

Where Interests map in the ICF for early childhood

In the ICF-CY, Interests are coded under Body Functions — specifically the motivational and emotional Mental functions of Chapter b1 — but their clinical meaning in early childhood emerges in the Activities and Participation domains, especially play (d880) and social interaction (d7). Interests are best understood as a body-function driver of participation rather than a standalone domain, sitting at the intersection of intrinsic motivation and the engagement it produces in everyday routines.

Where Interests map in the ICF for early childhood
Where do Interests sit in the ICF? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Where a child's interests sit in the ICF is less about what they enjoy and more about how engagement powers participation in everyday life.

In short

In the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health — Children & Youth version (ICF-CY), Interests are coded under Mental functions (Chapter b1), specifically within the global and specific mental functions that underpin motivation and engagement — and they express themselves most visibly through the Activities and Participation domains, notably Chapter d8 (Major life areas) and d9 (Community, social and civic life, including play). In early childhood, interests are therefore best read as a body-function driver of participation, not as a domain in their own right. They sit at the intersection of intrinsic motivation (a mental function) and the engagement it produces in play, learning and social routines.

How interests map across the ICF framework

The ICF deliberately separates what a child's body and mind can do (Body Functions and Structures) from what a child actually does in real life (Activities and Participation), all shaped by Environmental and Personal Factors. Interests belong primarily to Body Functions: they relate to motivational and emotional mental functions — the drive that orients a young child toward an object, person or activity. This is why, in observation, a clinician notes interests as a functional capacity that fuels behaviour.

Yet interests rarely stay confined to one code. Their clinical meaning emerges in Activities and Participation — when a toddler's interest in stacking becomes sustained play (d880, engagement in play), or when shared interest in a game scaffolds turn-taking and early social participation (Chapter d7, interpersonal interactions). For early childhood, the nurturing-care lens treats interests as a hinge between capacity and participation: a strong, flexible repertoire of interests broadens the range of activities a child willingly enters, while a narrow or fixed pattern may constrain participation and warrant a closer look. Environmental Factors — caregiver responsiveness, available materials, routines — then either amplify or dampen how interests translate into real-world engagement.

Why this matters for measurement

Because interests are a body-function driver expressed through participation, they are most usefully measured in context rather than as an isolated trait. A profile that captures both the underlying motivational function and its participation footprint gives a richer, more actionable picture than either lens alone — which is precisely the structured, multi-domain view a clinician builds during assessment.

The Pinnacle way

This is general educational 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 clinician-administered structured assessment maps a child's motivational and participation profile across ICF-aligned domains, then informs an individualised plan that may draw on occupational therapy and play-based supports.

Trusted sources

WHO International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) and its Children & Youth derivation, which separate Body Functions from Activities and Participation; WHO Nurturing Care Framework on early engagement and play; the European Academy of Childhood Disability on functional, participation-focused description of children's development.

Next step — If you are profiling a child's interests for research or clinical planning, connect with our team to see how interest and engagement are captured within a structured, ICF-aligned assessment.

What to watch

Whether a young child's interests are broad and flexible enough to widen the range of activities they willingly enter, or narrow and fixed in a way that constrains participation in play, learning and social routines.

Try this at home

Follow the child's lead — notice what naturally draws their attention, then gently extend that interest into shared play and turn-taking, so motivation becomes participation rather than just preference.

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

Is Interests a single ICF domain?

No. In the ICF-CY, Interests are coded primarily within Mental functions (Body Functions, Chapter b1) as a motivational function, but they are clinically expressed through the Activities and Participation domains — particularly play and social interaction. They are best read as a driver of participation rather than a standalone domain.

Why are Interests linked to play in the ICF?

Because intrinsic motivation — the body-function aspect of interest — orients a young child toward activities. In early childhood this most often surfaces as engagement in play (d880) and interpersonal interactions (Chapter d7), where interest becomes observable, measurable participation.

How does Pinnacle assess a child's interests?

Through a clinician-administered structured assessment that maps the motivational function and its participation footprint across ICF-aligned domains. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

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