What do you notice about the child or young person?
Physical characteristics:
- The child or young person may be awkward in their movements. They may bump into, spill, or knock things over.
- The child or young person may experience difficulty with gross motor skills (whole body), fine motor skills (using hands), or both.
- The child or young person may be delayed in developing certain motor skills such as riding a tricycle/bicycle, catching a ball, jumping rope, doing up buttons, and tying shoelaces.
- The child or young person may show a discrepancy between their motor abilities and their abilities in other areas. For example, intellectual and language skills may be quite strong while motor skills are delayed.
- The child or young person may have difficulty learning new motor skills. Once learned, certain motor skills may be performed quite well while others may continue to be performed poorly.
- The child or young person may have more difficulty with activities that require constant changes in their body position or when they must adapt to changes in the environment (for example, following movements in P.E, playing team sports).
- The child or young person may have difficulty with activities that require the coordinated use of both sides of the body (for example, cutting with scissors, using cutlery, performing star jumps) and may be late to develop a hand dominance.
- The child or young person may exhibit poor postural control and poor balance particularly in activities that require balance (for example, stair climbing, standing while dressing).
- The child or young person may have difficulty with printing or handwriting. This skill involves continually interpreting feedback about the movements of the hand while planning new movements, and is a very difficult task for most children or young people with DCD.
- The child or young person may also exhibit sensory processing issues.
Emotional/behavioural characteristics:
- The child or young person may show a lack of interest in, or avoid, particular activities, especially those that require a physical response. For a child or young person with DCD, performing motor skills requires significant effort. Fatigue and repeated failure may cause the child or young person to avoid participating in motor tasks.
- The child or young person may demonstrate a low frustration tolerance, decreased self-esteem, and a lack of motivation due to difficulties coping with activities that are required in all aspects of their life.
- The child or young person may avoid playing with peers on the playground as they struggle to do some of the activities to the same level. Some children or young people will seek out younger children to play with while others will play on their own. This may be due to decreased self-confidence or avoidance of physical activities.
- The child or young person may seem dissatisfied with their performance (For example, erases written work, complains of performance in motor activities, shows frustration with work product).
- The child or young person may be resistant to changes in their routine or in their environment. If the child or young person has to expend a lot of effort to plan a task, then even a small change in how it is to be performed may present a significant problem for the child or young person.
Other characteristics:
- The child or young person may have difficulty balancing the need for speed with the need for accuracy. For example, handwriting may be very neat but extremely slow.
- The child or young person may have difficulty with academic subjects such as mathematics, spelling, or written language which require handwriting to be accurate and organised on the page.
- The child or young person may have difficulty completing work within an expected time frame. Since tasks require much more effort, children or young people may be more willing to be distracted and may become frustrated with a task that should be straightforward.
- The child or young person may have general difficulties organising their desk, locker, homework, or even the space on a page.
- The child or young person may present with sensory processing difficulties which means they find it difficult to respond to sensory information and will therefore either avoid or seek out particular sensory experiences.