The child pretends to be a restaurant waiter, carrying a tray with objects from one place to another without dropping anything.
- Give the child a lightweight tray, flat plate, or hardcover book. Place 1–2 unbreakable items on it (a plastic cup, a small stuffed animal, a block).
- Mark a starting point and a delivery point 3–5 meters apart.
- Say: “You’re a fancy waiter! Your customer ordered this special delivery. Walk it to the table without dropping anything!”
- The child walks carefully, keeping the tray level, to the delivery point.
- Start with easy items and progress to more challenging ones (a half-filled cup of water, a ball that can roll off).
- Celebrate each successful delivery!
Variation: Walk the tray along a tape line for a combined challenge. Carry a spoon with a ball (egg-and-spoon style). Carry items on the head (beanbag, small book) instead of a tray.
Requirements
- Space: 3–5 meters of walking distance; can be adjusted to any room
- Surface: Flat floor; works indoors or outdoors
- Materials: A lightweight tray, flat plate, or hardcover book; unbreakable cups, blocks, small toys, or plastic eggs; optional spoon and ball for egg-and-spoon variation
- Participants: 1 adult + 1 child (adult is the "customer" placing orders)
- Supervision: Light — supervise to ensure safe carrying
Rationale & Objective
Carrying objects while walking is a dual-task balance challenge that requires the child to maintain postural stability while coordinating upper-body control of an external object. This is a cornerstone of the Montessori Practical Life curriculum, where “Carrying a Tray” is one of the earliest exercises — its purpose is to develop balance, gross motor control, and concentration simultaneously. The vestibular system must integrate balance demands with the upper-body task of keeping the tray level. Heavy-work activities (carrying weighted objects) also provide proprioceptive input that helps children with body awareness and self-regulation.
Progress Indicators
- Early: tray tilts significantly; items slide or fall off; child watches the tray exclusively (not the path); walks very slowly and stiffly
- Developing: keeps tray mostly level with occasional tilts; manages lightweight items without dropping; can look up briefly; walks at a slow but steady pace
- Proficient: carries tray smoothly across the room with stable, level tray; can carry a half-filled cup of water without spilling; glances between tray and path naturally
- Advanced: carries tray while walking on a line or navigating around obstacles; manages a cup of water without spilling; can carry items on head (beanbag); carries and delivers with smooth, confident gait
Safety Notes
- Use only unbreakable items (no glass or ceramic) to prevent injury from drops
- If using water, use only small amounts and have a towel ready — spills create slippery surfaces
- Ensure the walking path is clear of tripping hazards
- The tray should be appropriately sized for the child’s hands — not too wide or heavy
- Supervise closely when carrying items near stairs or steps
Hints
- Playfulness: set up a pretend restaurant at home. The child takes “orders” from family members and delivers items. Give the restaurant a silly name. Let them wear an apron
- Sustain interest: increase challenge gradually — more items on the tray, longer routes, trickier paths. Introduce a “tip jar” (sticker chart) for successful deliveries
- Common mistake: starting with too many items or too much water. Begin with a single lightweight item on the tray and build up
- Limited space: even carrying a tray from the kitchen counter to the dining table is practice. This integrates naturally into daily routines
- Cross-domain: the child can “read” the order from a slip of paper (literacy); count items on the tray (numeracy); practice polite phrases like “Here is your order!” (social/language)
- Progression: empty tray → single stable item → multiple items → rolling item (ball) → liquid in a cup → walk along a line → walk around obstacles → carry on head
Sources
- Montessori Practical Life — "Carrying a Tray" preliminary exercise (balance, concentration, independence)
- Montessori Practical Life — "Walking on the Line" with tray variation
- Head Start ELOF — gross motor coordination and balance indicators for preschoolers
- UK EYFS Physical Development — balancing while carrying objects