Many people hear the word “occupation” and think of jobs, and in many ways, they aren’t wrong. Occupations are the things we do and engage in every day. For children, their occupations include playing, learning, and developing independence in everyday routines. Among the most important of these are activities of daily living (ADLs). These include skills like dressing, toileting, self-feeding, bathing, grooming, and moving from surface to surface (transfers and mobility).
In occupational therapy, the focus is on building the foundational skills that support a child’s ability to participate in these activities. This includes strengthening fine and gross motor coordination, improving balance and body awareness, and promoting sensory regulation so that a child can engage more easily in daily routines. For children, mastering self-help and daily living skills is not just about doing for themselves, it represents critical milestones of independence that build confidence, self-efficacy, and engagement in life.
Understanding Activities of Daily Living (ADLs)
ADLs are the everyday self-care tasks that allow individuals to function independently in their environment. For children, these activities evolve with age and ability. Early independence often starts with simple tasks like holding their bottle, finger feeding, or removing socks and gradually progresses to more complex activities like dressing independently, brushing teeth, or preparing simple snacks.
Occupational therapists often break these tasks down into developmental milestones. For example:
These milestones are influenced by many factors including motor skills, sensory processing, attention, and motivation, all of which OTs address in therapy.
The Role of Occupational Therapy
Occupational therapists view self-help skills as functional goals that tie together multiple developmental domains. For instance, learning to dress requires fine motor dexterity (used to manipulate zippers and buttons), gross motor coordination (to balance while standing on one leg pulling up pants or socks), and sensory awareness (to tolerate different clothing textures). In therapy, activities are chosen intentionally to target these skills through play-based methods. A child might strengthen hand coordination by playing with play doh, practice bilateral coordination through stringing beads, or improve sensory regulation through deep-pressure activities before attempting a self-care routine.
OTs also collaborate closely with parents and caregivers to promote carryover of skills at home. Strategies may include:
The focus is always on helping the child achieve success within their environment. This means not just performing a skill in therapy but generalizing it to everyday life.
Family Involvement: The Key to Progress
Parental involvement is the cornerstone of success in developing daily living skills. Occupational therapists work with families to create realistic strategies that fit into natural routines. For example, encouraging a child to help zip their jacket before going outside or to wash their hands before snack time provides consistent, meaningful opportunities for practice.
Families can also promote independence by offering choices, modeling tasks, and celebrating small successes. Even brief moments of positive reinforcement like praising a child for trying can boost motivation and engagement and encourage the child to repeat whatever the task is again. When parents understand developmental expectations and receive practical tools from their OT, they become empowered partners in their child’s growth. Together, the therapist and family create a bridge between therapy and everyday life.
The Developmental Benefits of Self-Help Skills
As children develop independence in self-care, they also experience growth in cognitive, emotional, and social areas. Learning to complete daily living tasks fosters confidence and self-efficacy, problem solving skills, body awareness & coordination, and social participation. Each mastered skill reinforces a child’s belief in their ability to try new things. Dressing challenges (like a backward shirt) encourage critical thinking and persistence. Being able to feed oneself or dress independently supports participation in group settings like daycare or preschool.
From an OT lens, these outcomes are essential for overall well-being and participation. Children who struggle with self-help tasks may experience frustration, reduced self-esteem, or even social withdrawal. That’s why addressing these skills early is so important and addressing them through play makes it fun for everyone.
Self-help and daily living skills are more than functional tasks, they are steppingstones toward independence, confidence, and participation. Through occupational therapy, children gain the motor, sensory, and cognitive foundations needed to master these essential skills. By collaborating with families, using play as the vehicle for learning, and breaking skills into achievable steps, occupational therapists help children reach their fullest potential in daily life.