Stages of Motor Development
Stages of Motor Development
This topic covers three stages of motor development, spanning the ages
0 to 12, beginning with early reflexes, and developing through the
various milestones that a child reaches as they mature.
Stages of development
There are three stages of motor development in children.
Method
Age Disappears
Motor preparation
Tonic neck
4 months
Stepping
2 months
Palmar grasp
3-4 months
Motor Skill
Average Age
Achieved
Age Range
(90% Infants)
6 weeks
3 weeks-4
months
2 months
3 weeks-4
months
2 months
3 weeks-5
months
Grasps cube
3 months, 3 weeks
2-7 months
4 months
2-7 months
Sits alone
7 months
5-9 months
Crawls
7 months
5-11 months
Pulls to stand
8 months
5-12 months
Plays Pat-a-cake
9 months, 3 weeks
7-15 months
Stands alone
11 months
9-16 months
Walks alone
11 months, 3 weeks
9-17 months
13 months, 3 weeks
10-19 months
Scribbles vigorously
14 months
10-21 months
16 months
12-23 months
Jumps in place
23 months, 2 weeks
17-30 months
Summary of Table
1. Motor control of the head comes before control of the legs. This
head-to-tail sequence is called the cephalocaudal trend.
2. Motor development proceeds from the centre of the body outward;
i.e. the head, trunk and arm control is mastered before the
6-12 months the infant can use a pincer grasp, thus increasing their
ability to manipulate objects.
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Basic locomotor
Ball-handling
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Changes are more subtle, and are often to fine motor skills only
BiologicalInfluences
Motor skill development is influenced by the following:
Genetics and ethnicity. This can affect the rate and ability of motor
skill development and relates to body weight, size, and strength
relevant to body weight. These aspects and differing rates of
As the table above indicates, differences between males and females are
apparent as early as preschool. Although boys have larger muscle mass, this
does not appear to have any influence on their superiority with regards to
gross motor skills. This is the result of the social interpretation of what it
means to be male or female in a particular society: gender, the social
construction of sex.
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Environment
Environmental influences that can effect the acquisition or development of
motor skills can be seen as both social and physical.
Social
Physical
That boys and girls socialise differently, e.g. that boys tend to be
competitive and girls more cooperative, has implications for the
organisation of activities and the play environment.
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Social Learning
Social interactions are an essential part of motor development. It is
important for parents and teachers to understand the link between
these two areas.
Infants have been born with, or quickly acquire a few abilities that assist
them in learning about people.
Infants spend much of their time using their senses.
Babies show a lot of interest in:
Faces
Voice
Movement
Clumsy
Uncoordinated
In both of these cases, the movements will become polished. This may be
over a period of time and after a lot of practice. Children spend enormous
hours at primary school each year. Many hours of school each day involves
motor-based activities.
In the classroom
In the playground
Reading
Sports
Writing
Fitness
Cutting
Pasting
Climbing
Children who are not as coordinated may acquire poor play skills. Poor
motor development in children often means they find it hard to keep up with
their peers. These children are likely to be turned away because of the
inability to run, climb, catch or throw. This will affect a child's self esteem
and they are then placed at risk of becoming socially isolated.
If these play skills are affected these children will not make friendships, and
they will be less confident. This will result in an unhappy and very lonely
child. Children placed in this situation usually wander around the school
playground by themselves.
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Gross Motor
things like skipping, hopping and
running are awkward or impossible
to do
stumbles
bumps into things
Fine Motor
difficulty manipulating objects such as scissors,
blocks, beads
awkward grasp on objects such as pencils
difficulty tying shoes or buttoning shirt
Postural Control
slouches
props head when sitting
Perceptual Skills
difficulty matching objects
loses place when copying or reading
Cognitive Skills
distractible
unable to transfer/generalise skills
usually an average IQ
Sensory Processing
hypersensitive to sensory stimuli
(eg: loud noises)
touches everything/nothing
hates being hugged/loves physical
contact
afraid of movement/loves
movement
lethargic/unusually active
Handwriting
Why worry about handwriting?
Components of Handwriting
Strategies for Improving Handwriting
Handwriting is influenced by the development of appropriate sensorimotor, perceptual
and cognitive skills. When addressing handwriting difficulties in a child delays in any
Components of Handwriting
The Handwriting Checklist
Posture
a) Weight of the body is on the non-writing side:
leaning on your writing hand restricts the flowing movement across the page.
The writing hand should be resting lightly on the page to enable the flowing
movement across the page.
Elevation of the writing arm will also result in decreased control of movement.
Left hand
Right hand
paper should be tilted at about 15 degrees to the left for right handers and to the
right for left handers
desk surface should be at the correct height so that the elbows are at about 90
degrees, lightly resting on the surface of the table
both feet should be resting flat on the floor with knees and hips bent at about
90 degrees
Letter/Word Placement
a) Correct placement between lines
b) Correct spacing between words and letters
Letter Formation
a) Letter formation is legible and the correct shape
b) Letters are written in the correct direction
c) All letters are of a consistent size
d) Clean retrace on letters such as 'm' and 'b'
e) The 'sticks' on letters are the appropriate length
Movement
a) The movement is a smooth and continuous flow
b) Smooth changes of direction
c) The sequence of movements assists efficient writing
Grasp
a) The pencil is held firmly: not too tight or too limp.
grasps on the pencil that are too tight result in too much pressure being exerted
on the pencil point. This may be evident in children who continually break the
pencil lead, make holes in their page or show signs of fatigue quickly
grasps that are too limp result in a lack of control and precise thumb and
b) The space between the pencil and the fingers allows for some arching of the fingers:
the pencil is held with the tips of the thumb and index fingers, resting against
the middle finger allowing an open web space.
c) The fingers are placed away from the pencil point so that the pencil tip is visible:
Appropriate Grasp
Early Identification
skills for coping with and compensating for their learning difficulty.
Learning experiences and teaching strategies are most effective when teachers combine
Focus of Intervention
The focus of intervention shifts as students move through school. Although the
emphasis of intervention varies at the different stages of schooling, the individualised
approaches and strategies for learning are equally relevant to primary and secondary
levels.
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result in written work being slow, rarely finished on time and often
messy and unintelligible.
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Suggestions
verbal cueing
accept printing
role play
minimising distractions
let the student know what the expectations are (eg: the student's best
work)
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Activities that address certain sensory and motor development
problems
problems?
There are many different activities that can be used to develop different
motor skills. Rather than prescribing certain activities for certain
motor/developmental delays we aim to facilitate understanding of the
motor difficulty and suggest activities taking into account:
age level
skill level
what the child enjoys
the resources available
The list of activities is endless and is only limited by an individual's
imagination.
through and what level does the child reach before you deem
that they don't require your OT services any longer?
Assessment procedure:
referral received
referral is brought to intake meeting where it is discussed and assigned
to the appropriate professionals (ie: speech, physio, OT)
parent/caregiver to arrange initial assessment (at the centre)
initial assessment
further assessment as required (may be at the centre, at home, at
preschool or childcare)
report written and ongoing input discussed with family
There are usually two ways in which a child is deemed as no longer
requiring occupational therapy:
on review they fall into the average skill level for their age
child?
How soon you notice changes depends on the type of problem and its
severity. Changes are observed, on average, about six to eight weeks
after therapy begins
10. How does the therapist determine when therapy should end?
The therapist continually assesses the child. Improvement generally
occurs in the following areas:
gross and fine motor skills
interpersonal skills
academic performance
self-esteem
language skills.
Theme Activities
Getting to know your body
THIS WEEK'S THEME IS:
"Weather"
This week's activities were
based around the weather
theme.
Make a sandwich
following the
sequence given,
have all ingredients
ready, e.g. butter,
then cheese, then
ham.
Helping to hang
out washing, e.g.
give me the
'undies', then the
shorts, then the
(red) shirt.
sequencing skills
language
development and
awareness.
Emphasize 'start'
and 'finish' as you
ask the child to
take a certain
number of steps
along a line; jump
along a path; clap.
Gradually increase
the number and
variety of
movements as the
child succeeds.
Every movement
should also be
Help develop
your child's
awareness in
seeing a
pattern or
order in
movement,
e.g. walking
with one foot
in front of
the other.
Count
footprints on
a wet floor,
on the beach
or in the
mud.
Copy the
pattern of 3dimensional
objects. Use
a variety of
different
things
(blocks,
cutlery, pegs,
Lego) and
make a
sequence for
the child to
copy.
Play simple
games of
movement
using dice.
For example,
throw the
dice and the
child moves
the number
of spaces
indicated on
Moving in a sequence
"Why do we ...?"
verbalised by the
child as he/she
does it. 'Hands on
knees, clap hands
together.' ' Walk
backwards to the
window, touch
nose, sit on the
floor'.
The ability to
recognise and
reproduce a
sequence is needed
in order to plan
anything. Obstacle
courses are the
most effective way
of teaching these
skills to children.
Counting
movements.
Children need to
experience
numbers by first
counting their own
movements. Any
kind of movement
can be counted, out
loud, and often.
the dice by
jumping or
clapping.
Most
children
enjoy
following a
recipe to
bake a cake
or biscuits.
Help your
child to
follow the
sequence in
the recipe.
Using a doll,
dress the doll
in the order
given, e.g.
socks, shirt,
then shorts
Do simple
paper folding
with the
child
copying and
talking about
each step as
you go. Then
see if 2 or 3
steps
combined
can be
followed.
Cut up a
simple comic
strip, then
put it back in
order.
Describe
3, then 4 etc..
Discuss order of
daily events. Relate
these to what time
of day it is e.g.
morning. Cut out
pictures from
magazines of
children doing
various daily tasks
e.g. sleeping,
eating, walking,
brushing teeth etc.
Have your child put
these in the correct
order. Use a
structured photo
system for the daily
routine, consisting
of initially one or
two items then
gradually
increasing the
demands.
Encourage your
child to listen to
the order of sounds
in the environment,
e.g. 'During the
storm, what was
heard first - the
rain, the thunder or
the wind?'.
Copy sounds
made:
with the body,
e.g.: clicking
fingers and tongue,
clapping,
raspberries with
the mouth, lip
smacking, whistle,
stamp feet ... with
instruments, e.g.
drum, rhythm
sticks, whistle,
shakers,
tambourine,
triangle, recorder
animal noises, e.g.
moo, neigh, snap,
woof, baa, miaow,
each step.
Thread beads
following a
sequence,
e.g. thread
blue then
orange,
thread a big
bead then a
little bead,
thread a
round bead
then a square
bead.
Line up toy
cars and
trucks on a
road in the
sequence
given, e.g.
car,
ambulance,
then motor
bike OR red
car, the blue
car, then
green car.
Pick a
familiar
activity (e.g.
eating a
banana,
borrowing a
book from
the library,
having a
bath), and
discuss the
steps
involved.
Draw
hiss.
pictures for
each step,
take turns to
line up
pictures in
order.
Retell a
favourite
story,
making sure
to keep the
right order of
events. You
could use the
book to help,
or draw
pictures of
some of the
main events.
Using family
photos make a
sequence of
the child's or
someone
else's life
from baby to
child.
References
Alexander, Boehme & Cupps, 1993 Normal Development of Functional
Motor Skills Therapy Skill Builders: USA.
Berk, L 1997 Child Development, 4th Edition Allyn & Bacon: USA
Bushnell, E. & Boudreau, J., 1993, 'Motor Development and the Mind:
The Potential Role of Motor Abilities as a Determinant of Aspects of
Perceptual Development', in Child Development, Vol. 64, pp 1005,
1021.
Cocks, N., 1996 Watch Me, I Can Do It Simon & Schuster: Australia,