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 - Balance & Stability

Maintaining body equilibrium during static and dynamic activities.

Examples & Achievements

  • Stands on one foot for 10 seconds
  • Walks along a balance beam or line on the floor
  • Balances while carrying an object
  • Can freeze in different poses during a game

How to Measure

  • Single-leg stance duration (target 10+ seconds)
  • Walking heel-to-toe along a straight line for 3+ meters
  • BOT-2 Balance subtest
Sources (3)
  • CDC/AAP Milestones
  • BOT-2
  • PDMS-2
12 Exercises
Flamingo Stand Tightrope Town The Waiter Game Musical Statues Bat in the Cave Wobbly Island Zigzag Zoomers Scarecrow Catch Caterpillar Walk Jack-in-the-Box Helicopter Spin Animal Yoga Garden
Zigzag Zoomers

An agility-and-balance course where the child navigates around markers in a zigzag pattern, practicing rapid direction changes while staying balanced.

  1. Set up 5–6 markers (cones, water bottles, stuffed animals, shoes) in a zigzag pattern, spaced about 1 meter apart.
  2. Say: “You’re a race car zooming through the course! Weave around each cone without knocking any over!”
  3. The child walks (then jogs, then runs) the zigzag course, changing direction at each marker.
  4. Time the run if the child enjoys competition; compare their own times across attempts.
  5. Add a return trip using a different movement: walking backward, sidestepping, or hopping.

Variation: Make the course tighter (markers closer) for more frequent direction changes. Add a balance beam section between markers. Use chalk arrows on pavement showing the path. Play “follow the leader” with the parent demonstrating silly walks.

Requirements

  • Space: About 5–8 meters of length and 2–3 meters of width (garden, park, hallway)
  • Surface: Flat ground; grass, pavement, or gym floor
  • Materials: 5–6 markers — cones, water bottles, shoes, toys, or anything the child can weave around
  • Participants: 1 adult + 1 child (for setup and timing); more fun with 2–3 children taking turns
  • Supervision: Light — observe from the side

Rationale & Objective

Changing direction while moving requires the child to shift their center of gravity laterally, decelerate, and re-accelerate in a new direction — a complex dynamic balance task. SHAPE America Active Start guidelines specifically recommend asking preschoolers to “move in different directions (forward, back, to the side, in a zigzag).” This exercise trains agility — the combination of speed, strength, coordination, and balance needed for playground games, sports readiness, and everyday situations like navigating a crowded room. Gallahue categorizes directional change as a dynamic stability skill in the fundamental movement phase (ages 2–7).

Progress Indicators

  • Early: knocks over markers frequently; takes wide turns (1+ meter clearance); slows to a near-stop at each direction change; loses balance or stumbles
  • Developing: knocks over 1–2 markers per run; turns are tighter but still slow; maintains balance during walking-speed direction changes; some hesitation at each marker
  • Proficient: completes the course without knocking markers; smooth, flowing direction changes at jogging speed; uses body lean to turn efficiently
  • Advanced: navigates tight zigzag at running speed; can weave backward or sideways; adds creative movements at each marker (hop, spin); time improves consistently

Safety Notes

  • Use soft, lightweight markers that won’t cause injury if kicked (avoid hard cones on indoor floors)
  • Ensure running surface is even and free of tripping hazards
  • Space markers far enough apart initially (1.5 meters) so the child has room to turn safely
  • Shoes recommended on hard outdoor surfaces; bare feet fine on grass or indoor carpet
  • If multiple children, run one at a time to avoid collisions

Hints

  • Playfulness: theme it as a car race (“Zoom zoom, around the bend!”), a horse gallop through a forest, or a spaceship navigating asteroids. Let the child set up the course layout
  • Sustain interest: rearrange markers each session (wider, tighter, curved, L-shaped). Add “bonus points” for specific movements at each marker. Introduce a stopwatch for time trials
  • Common mistake: setting markers too far apart so the child just runs in a straight line. The challenge is in the turns — keep markers close enough to require actual direction changes
  • Limited space: in a hallway, set up 3 markers alternating left and right. Even a small room can fit a simple 3-cone zigzag
  • Cross-domain: number the markers and call out a sequence to follow (working memory + balance); have the child say the color of each marker as they pass (language); count markers out loud (numeracy)
  • Progression: walking pace → jogging → running → tighter spacing → add backward segments → add obstacles between markers → combine with other movement patterns

Sources

  • SHAPE America Active Start — "move in different directions (forward, back, to the side, zigzag)"
  • Gallahue, D.L. & Ozmun, J.C. — Understanding Motor Development: dynamic stability and directional change in fundamental movement phase
  • UK EYFS Physical Development — balance, coordination, and agility through movement games

Childhood MapPhysical & Motor DevelopmentGross Motor - Balance & Stability

Zigzag Zoomers

An agility-and-balance course where the child navigates around markers in a zigzag pattern, practicing rapid direction changes while staying balanced.

  1. Set up 5–6 markers (cones, water bottles, stuffed animals, shoes) in a zigzag pattern, spaced about 1 meter apart.
  2. Say: “You’re a race car zooming through the course! Weave around each cone without knocking any over!”
  3. The child walks (then jogs, then runs) the zigzag course, changing direction at each marker.
  4. Time the run if the child enjoys competition; compare their own times across attempts.
  5. Add a return trip using a different movement: walking backward, sidestepping, or hopping.

Variation: Make the course tighter (markers closer) for more frequent direction changes. Add a balance beam section between markers. Use chalk arrows on pavement showing the path. Play “follow the leader” with the parent demonstrating silly walks.

Changing direction while moving requires the child to shift their center of gravity laterally, decelerate, and re-accelerate in a new direction — a complex dynamic balance task. SHAPE America Active Start guidelines specifically recommend asking preschoolers to “move in different directions (forward, back, to the side, in a zigzag).” This exercise trains agility — the combination of speed, strength, coordination, and balance needed for playground games, sports readiness, and everyday situations like navigating a crowded room. Gallahue categorizes directional change as a dynamic stability skill in the fundamental movement phase (ages 2–7).