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 Simon Says variant where commands are unfamiliar combinations of body actions rather than the usual touch-your- nose ones. The child must process a verbal instruction → build a motor plan → execute it. Trains praxis on verbal command, the SIPT subtest most predictive of academic instruction- following.
Stand 2–3 m apart. The adult is “Mission Control”; the child is the “Robot.”
Mission Control gives a command that combines body parts or actions in unusual ways. Avoid auto-pilot commands. Use:
The Robot performs the action. Hold for 3 seconds so the plan sticks.
Add the Simon Says rule for older 5-year-olds: only obey if the command starts with “Simon says.” Without “Simon says” — freeze.
After 8–10 commands, swap roles. The child gives commands; the adult performs (and may “fail” creatively to keep it light).
Variation: use picture cards instead of verbal commands — the child draws a card showing the action and performs it (visual-only praxis). Or layer with rhythm: “On the beat — clap, stomp, clap high, stomp low.” Or run as a whisper game where commands must be listened to closely.
Requirements
Rationale & Objective
Progress Indicators
Safety Notes
Hints
Sources
A Simon Says variant where commands are unfamiliar combinations of body actions rather than the usual touch-your- nose ones. The child must process a verbal instruction → build a motor plan → execute it. Trains praxis on verbal command, the SIPT subtest most predictive of academic instruction- following.
Stand 2–3 m apart. The adult is “Mission Control”; the child is the “Robot.”
Mission Control gives a command that combines body parts or actions in unusual ways. Avoid auto-pilot commands. Use:
The Robot performs the action. Hold for 3 seconds so the plan sticks.
Add the Simon Says rule for older 5-year-olds: only obey if the command starts with “Simon says.” Without “Simon says” — freeze.
After 8–10 commands, swap roles. The child gives commands; the adult performs (and may “fail” creatively to keep it light).
Variation: use picture cards instead of verbal commands — the child draws a card showing the action and performs it (visual-only praxis). Or layer with rhythm: “On the beat — clap, stomp, clap high, stomp low.” Or run as a whisper game where commands must be listened to closely.
Requirements
Rationale & Objective
Progress Indicators
Safety Notes
Hints
Sources