Strength & Agility
Strength & Agility in the ICF: Which Functioning Domain?
In early childhood, Strength & Agility maps principally to the ICF Activities and Participation component, in the Mobility (d4) chapter — changing body position, walking and moving around (running, climbing, jumping). It is underpinned by Body Functions, notably muscle power, tone and endurance (b730–b740). The functionally meaningful reading uses the d4 activity lens, scored by capacity and performance, with Body Function codes documenting contributing impairments.
Where a toddler's running, climbing and jumping live on the ICF map — that is the question Strength & Agility answers.
In short
In early childhood, Strength & Agility maps principally to the ICF component of Activities and Participation, specifically the Mobility (d4) chapter — domains such as changing and maintaining body position (d410–d429), walking and moving (d450–d469), and moving around (d455, e.g. running, climbing, jumping). It is also underpinned by Body Functions — notably muscle power, tone and endurance (b730–b740) and movement-related functions (b760). Read across both components, Strength & Agility describes both the underlying physical capacity and how a child uses it to act and take part in everyday play.The science: capacity, performance and the two-component view
The WHO International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) — and its child-and-youth derivation, the ICF-CY — deliberately separates the body level from the activity level. Body Functions and Structures capture the physiological substrate: muscle power functions (b730), muscle tone (b735) and muscle endurance (b740), together with structures of the trunk and limbs (s750, s760). These are the engine of strength.Agility, however, is fundamentally an activity construct — it is observable in the child who pivots, dodges, climbs a play frame or alternates feet on stairs. It therefore lives most naturally in d4 Mobility, scored along ICF's twin qualifiers of capacity (what a child can do in a standardised setting) and performance (what they actually do in their real environment). For a practical motor profile in early childhood, the meaningful reading is the Activities-and-Participation one, with Body Function codes documenting the contributing impairments where present.
Why the distinction matters for measurement
Mapping to the correct ICF domain governs which constructs an instrument should sample and how goals are framed. A purely b730 (muscle power) lens risks reducing a richly functional skill to a strength number; the d4 lens keeps the child's participation — playground play, peer games, self-care transfers — at the centre. Linking observations to ICF codes also supports interoperable documentation and cross-study comparison.The Pinnacle way
This is general classificatory information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore®, a clinician-administered structured assessment, and any diagnosis are formed only at a [Pinnacle Blooms Network](/) centre under qualified clinician care, never from an app or form. Our motor profiling reads Strength & Agility across both ICF components and informs an individualised plan that may draw on occupational therapy and allied supports.Trusted sources
WHO ICF and ICF-CY classification framework defining the Body Functions and Activities and Participation components and the capacity/performance qualifiers; WHO browsable classification for the d4 Mobility chapter and b730–b740 neuromusculoskeletal functions.Next step — If you are profiling a child's gross-motor functioning, book a developmental motor review to map Strength & Agility across both ICF components and set participation-focused goals.
What to watch
Read Strength & Agility primarily as an Activities and Participation (d4 Mobility) construct — running, climbing, jumping, changing position — scored by capacity and performance, with Body Function codes (b730–b740 muscle power, tone, endurance) documenting underlying contributors.
Try this at home
When profiling motor skills, frame goals around what the child does in real play settings (climbing the frame, dodging in a game) rather than isolated strength numbers — this keeps the ICF participation lens central.
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 Strength & Agility a Body Function or an Activity in the ICF?
Both levels apply. Agility is best captured as an Activity and Participation construct in the Mobility (d4) chapter, while the underlying capacity is documented in Body Functions — muscle power (b730), tone (b735) and endurance (b740). The functionally meaningful reading in early childhood is the d4 activity lens.
Which ICF chapter covers running, climbing and jumping?
These sit in the d4 Mobility chapter of Activities and Participation — particularly changing and maintaining body position (d410–d429) and walking and moving (d450–d469, including moving around in d455).
Why use the capacity and performance qualifiers here?
ICF distinguishes what a child can do in a standardised setting (capacity) from what they actually do in their everyday environment (performance). For Strength & Agility this captures both demonstrated ability and real-world participation in play.