A timed single-leg balance challenge where the child pretends to be a flamingo standing in a pond.
- The child stands on a flat surface with both feet together, arms relaxed at sides.
- Say: “You’re a flamingo standing in a pond! Lift one foot off the ground and tuck it against your other leg.”
- The child lifts one foot (resting it against the standing ankle or calf — never against the knee) and holds the pose.
- Count aloud together: “One flamingo-second, two flamingo-seconds…” to track duration.
- Switch to the other leg and repeat.
- Do 3 rounds on each leg, trying to beat the previous time.
Variation: Add arm positions — wings out wide, wings folded (hands on hips), or wings overhead. For extra challenge, hold a small stuffed animal on the head while balancing.
Requirements
- Space: 1–2 square meters of clear floor space (works anywhere)
- Surface: Flat, non-slippery floor; carpet, gym mat, or grass
- Materials: None required; optional stopwatch, stuffed animal for advanced variation
- Participants: 1 adult + 1 child (adult counts and models)
- Supervision: Light — stand nearby to spot if needed
Rationale & Objective
Static single-leg balance is a foundational stability skill assessed in both the BOT-2 Balance subtest and the PDMS-2 Stationary subtest. By age 5 children should stand on one foot for more than 8 seconds (CDC/AAP). This exercise directly trains postural control, ankle stabilizer strength, and proprioceptive awareness — the same systems tested clinically. The Pediatric Balance Scale identifies single-limb stance as explaining 64.5% of the variance in overall balance scores, making it the single most predictive balance task.
Progress Indicators
- Early: lifts foot but immediately puts it back down; holds for 1–3 seconds with large trunk sway and arms flailing; strong preference for one leg
- Developing: holds for 4–7 seconds with moderate trunk sway; uses arms actively for balance; can manage both legs but one side is clearly weaker
- Proficient: holds for 10+ seconds with minimal trunk sway; arms steady at sides or on hips; roughly equal on both legs
- Advanced: holds 15+ seconds; can maintain pose with eyes closed for 3–5 seconds; can add arm movements (flapping “wings”) without losing balance; can hold while slowly turning head side to side
Safety Notes
- Stand within arm’s reach of the child, especially during early attempts
- Ensure the floor is dry and free of objects that could cause slipping
- Bare feet provide the best proprioceptive feedback and grip; avoid socks on hard floors
- Do not have the child press the lifted foot against the standing knee (risk of lateral knee stress)
- If the child becomes frustrated, shorten the target time — any single-leg standing is beneficial
Hints
- Playfulness: “You’re a flamingo! Flamingos sleep on one leg. Can you be a sleepy flamingo? A flamingo eating a fish? A flamingo in a windstorm?” — give each round a character
- Sustain interest: track personal bests on a simple chart. Introduce “flamingo challenges” — hold a pose while parent asks silly questions. Compete together (parent on one leg too)
- Common mistake: children look at their feet. Encourage looking at a fixed spot ahead (“stare at the flamingo’s favorite flower”) — a visual focal point dramatically improves balance
- Limited space: needs almost no space. Perfect for a small apartment, waiting room, or even standing in a queue
- Cross-domain: count the seconds in another language (language learning); name colors/animals while balancing (cognitive dual-tasking, a technique used in pediatric PT)
- Progression: both feet close together → lift foot barely off ground → full single-leg stand → add arm positions → add head turns → close eyes → stand on a pillow (unstable surface)
Sources
- CDC/AAP Developmental Milestones — "stands on one foot for more than 8 seconds" (age 5)
- BOT-2 Balance subtest — single-leg stance items (standing on one leg on floor, eyes open)
- PDMS-2 Stationary subtest — single-leg balance items with trunk sway assessment
- Pediatric Balance Scale — single-limb stance item
- Gallahue, D.L. & Ozmun, J.C. — Understanding Motor Development: static balance in the fundamental movement phase