The importance of movement

  • Movement is one of the 'driving' forces of infant and child development. Early movement skills provide the infant with the means to:
    • learn about the mechanics of their limbs and of the environment, including gaining knowledge about the effects of gravity;
    • manipulate their environment to determine boundaries between self and the external world, and
    • establish meaningful interactions with caregivers.
IDevice Icon Activity
  • Can you provide 2 examples of movement-based activities that the child can use to:
    • learn the mechanics of his or her limbs
    • define boundaries
    • establish meaningful social interactions

  • Movement therefore 'sets the stage' for attaining goals across different domains of global infant development: physical, cognitive and social / emotional. In this respect, the 'quality' of infants movement would not be as important as the 'quantity' of movement. This is well demonstrated in the following video clip of a 7 month-old infant using a 'non-traditional' crawling method to reach her cognitive goal.

  • Assessment of the gross motor function of infants, therefore, serves a number of goals that extend beyond simply identifying what an infant can or cannot do and provides an 'early' marker of developmental concerns.