Childhood Map

Discover the amazing things 5-year-olds are learning — from climbing and jumping to friendships, feelings, and first words on a page. Each skill comes with fun activities you can try together.

Physical & Motor Development

Whole-body and fine movement skills including strength, coordination, balance, and the physical foundations for daily life and learning.

Sources (9)
  • CDC/AAP Developmental Milestones
  • ASQ-3
  • UK EYFS (Physical Development)
  • Polish Podstawa Programowa (Fizyczny)
  • Montessori (Practical Life)
  • Waldorf/Steiner
  • PDMS-2
  • BOT-2
  • Head Start ELOF (Perceptual, Motor & Physical Development)
8 Subdomains
Gross Motor - Locomotion10 Gross Motor - Balance & Stability12 Gross Motor - Object Control Fine Motor - Hand Strength & Dexterity Fine Motor - Pre-Writing & Drawing Bilateral Coordination Oral-Motor Skills Health, Safety & Nutrition
Gross Motor - Locomotion

Large-body movements for getting from place to place.

Examples & Achievements

  • Runs smoothly, changing speed and direction
  • Hops on one foot for at least 5 meters
  • Skips with alternating feet
  • Climbs playground equipment confidently
  • Jumps over a low obstacle with both feet
  • Walks up and down stairs alternating feet without holding rail

How to Measure

  • Can hop on one foot 10+ times without losing balance
  • Can skip with alternating feet for 5+ meters
  • Can run and stop on signal without falling
  • PDMS-2 Locomotion subtest
Sources (4)
  • CDC/AAP Milestones
  • ASQ-3
  • PDMS-2
  • BOT-2
10 Exercises
Red Light, Green Light Puddle Jumpers Giddy-Up Gallop Treasure Island Obstacle Course One-Foot Flamingo Hop Jungle Animal Safari Skip to My Lou The Castle Climb Sideways Crab Slide Giant Steps Stairway
Treasure Island Obstacle Course

A multi-station locomotor course combining different movement patterns into a narrative adventure.

  1. Set up 4–6 stations in sequence. Example layout:

    • The Tunnel: crawl under a table or through a play tunnel
    • The River: jump over a rope or towel on the ground (two-foot jump)
    • The Stepping Stones: walk heel-to-toe along tape on the floor (3 m)
    • The Mountain: climb over a couch cushion stack or low climbing frame
    • The Quicksand: hop on one foot across a marked zone (2 m)
    • The Treasure Chest: sprint the last 5 meters to grab a “treasure” (toy or sticker)
  2. Walk the child through each station once, explaining the movement.

  3. Let them run the full course. Time them if they enjoy competition, or just celebrate completion.

Variation: rearrange stations each time; add a “backwards” run-through; let the child design their own course.

Requirements

  • Space: At least a 5 × 3 meter area (a living room works); larger outdoors
  • Surface: Any surface appropriate to the stations; padding near climbing stations
  • Materials: Household items — cushions, rope/towel, tape, table/tunnel, a small prize
  • Participants: 1 child (with adult setup); 2–4 children take turns
  • Supervision: Moderate — particularly at climbing stations and elevation changes

Rationale & Objective

Obstacle courses are among the most well-supported interventions for gross motor development in preschoolers. They uniquely combine multiple locomotor patterns in a single activity — crawling, jumping, climbing, hopping, running — which is more effective than isolated skill practice. The course format also develops motor planning and sequencing (the child must remember what comes next and transition between patterns), connecting to executive function. UK EYFS specifically recommends obstacle courses, and Head Start identifies “coordinates increasingly complex movements” as a key indicator.

Progress Indicators

  • Early: needs reminders at each station; movements are hesitant; skips the hardest station; takes 3+ minutes
  • Developing: remembers the sequence; attempts all stations but some with difficulty; completes course in 1–2 minutes
  • Proficient: flows through all stations with minimal hesitation; good movement quality at each station; enjoys timing and personal bests
  • Advanced: completes course fluidly and quickly; suggests modifications; can run the course backwards; helps set up courses for others

Safety Notes

  • Secure any climbing elements so they cannot tip over; cushions stacked >50 cm need a spotter
  • Remove sharp-edged furniture from the course path
  • On hard floors, place a mat or cushion at landing zones
  • Ensure crawl-through spaces are wide enough
  • Multiple children should go one at a time
  • Check the course yourself before the child attempts it

Hints

  • Playfulness: the narrative is everything — “Treasure Island,” space mission, dinosaur rescue, spy training. Changing theme every few sessions keeps the same course feeling new
  • Sustain interest: let the child design the course layout (engages planning, gives ownership). Add one new station each week
  • Common mistake: making the course too hard or too long initially. Start with 3–4 simple stations. The child should succeed on the first try — challenge comes from speed and refinement
  • Limited space: a hallway works: crawl under a chair, hop over a shoe, walk the “tightrope” (tape line), touch the far wall and sprint back
  • Cross-domain: place letter/number cards at each station that spell a word when collected (literacy); have the child describe each station to a stuffed animal (language); count repetitions (numeracy)
  • Progression: 3 stations → 6 stations → timed runs → harder movement variants → child designs the course → blindfolded stations with verbal guidance (trust and listening)

Sources

  • Atlantis Press (2018) — obstacle course games show 66.7% improvement in gross motor development
  • Frontiers in Pediatrics (2024) — structured training on gross motor skills in 4–5-year-olds
  • UK EYFS — obstacle courses recommended for physical development
  • Head Start ELOF — "coordinates increasingly complex movements"
  • SHAPE America Active Start guidelines

Childhood MapPhysical & Motor DevelopmentGross Motor - Locomotion

Treasure Island Obstacle Course

A multi-station locomotor course combining different movement patterns into a narrative adventure.

  1. Set up 4–6 stations in sequence. Example layout:

    • The Tunnel: crawl under a table or through a play tunnel
    • The River: jump over a rope or towel on the ground (two-foot jump)
    • The Stepping Stones: walk heel-to-toe along tape on the floor (3 m)
    • The Mountain: climb over a couch cushion stack or low climbing frame
    • The Quicksand: hop on one foot across a marked zone (2 m)
    • The Treasure Chest: sprint the last 5 meters to grab a “treasure” (toy or sticker)
  2. Walk the child through each station once, explaining the movement.

  3. Let them run the full course. Time them if they enjoy competition, or just celebrate completion.

Variation: rearrange stations each time; add a “backwards” run-through; let the child design their own course.

Obstacle courses are among the most well-supported interventions for gross motor development in preschoolers. They uniquely combine multiple locomotor patterns in a single activity — crawling, jumping, climbing, hopping, running — which is more effective than isolated skill practice. The course format also develops motor planning and sequencing (the child must remember what comes next and transition between patterns), connecting to executive function. UK EYFS specifically recommends obstacle courses, and Head Start identifies “coordinates increasingly complex movements” as a key indicator.