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.
The neurological process of organizing sensory input from the body and environment to produce appropriate motor, behavioral, and emotional responses.
The ability to conceive, plan, and execute unfamiliar or complex sequences of movement (ideation, planning, execution).
Examples & Achievements
How to Measure
A graduated hand-clapping game progressing from a simple solo clap-pat pattern to partner clap-routines synced with rhyme. Trains bilateral motor sequencing — coordinating both hands in a remembered rhythmic pattern that crosses the body’s midline.
Start with a solo pattern — pat thighs twice, clap hands twice. Repeat to a steady beat ("pat-pat-clap-clap"). Keep going until the child can sustain it for 8 cycles.
Add a chant: any familiar nursery rhyme works. Try “Twinkle, twinkle, little star” with one pat-pat-clap-clap per line. The chant locks in the rhythm.
Move to a partner pattern:
Add a chant — classic “Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake, baker’s man” or “A sailor went to sea sea sea” or “Miss Mary Mack.” The chant gives the rhythm; the rhythm scaffolds the motor plan.
Increase complexity gradually. Add double claps, a knee slap in the middle, or a freeze (“on the word banana — STOP!”).
Variation: clap with feet (stomp pattern). Try a back-and-forth pattern with two children facing each other (peer praxis). For child-led sessions, the child invents and teaches a new clap pattern.
Requirements
Rationale & Objective
Progress Indicators
Safety Notes
Hints
Sources
A graduated hand-clapping game progressing from a simple solo clap-pat pattern to partner clap-routines synced with rhyme. Trains bilateral motor sequencing — coordinating both hands in a remembered rhythmic pattern that crosses the body’s midline.
Start with a solo pattern — pat thighs twice, clap hands twice. Repeat to a steady beat ("pat-pat-clap-clap"). Keep going until the child can sustain it for 8 cycles.
Add a chant: any familiar nursery rhyme works. Try “Twinkle, twinkle, little star” with one pat-pat-clap-clap per line. The chant locks in the rhythm.
Move to a partner pattern:
Add a chant — classic “Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake, baker’s man” or “A sailor went to sea sea sea” or “Miss Mary Mack.” The chant gives the rhythm; the rhythm scaffolds the motor plan.
Increase complexity gradually. Add double claps, a knee slap in the middle, or a freeze (“on the word banana — STOP!”).
Variation: clap with feet (stomp pattern). Try a back-and-forth pattern with two children facing each other (peer praxis). For child-led sessions, the child invents and teaches a new clap pattern.
Requirements
Rationale & Objective
Progress Indicators
Safety Notes
Hints
Sources