Skill
Moves Body with Sensory Awareness
Child uses sight, sound, and body awareness to plan movements and judge how their body fits and moves through space.
Ages 8–36 months
Why it matters
Safe, purposeful movement depends on reading the environment and the body at the same time. As toddlers scan for obstacles, gauge openings, and adjust to surfaces, they link perception to action, building the spatial awareness and motor planning that underlie coordinated movement and self-care.
Builds toward this milestone
- uses perceptual information in directing own actions, experiences, and interactions. — Head Start ELOF
- uses sensory information and body awareness to understand how their body relates to the environment. — Head Start ELOF
What mastery looks like
- Scans ahead and steps around or over obstacles while walking or crawling.
- Adjusts movement to the surface, such as slowing on a slippery or uneven floor.
- Judges whether their body will fit through or into a space before moving.
- Coordinates seeing and moving in routines, such as doing hand motions to a song.
How to observe it
- When crawling or walking toward a barrier, does the child plan a path around it rather than bumping into it?
- Does the toddler test or adjust their body to fit through a tunnel or under a table?
Accessibility
- Keep pathways predictable and well lit and add textured or sound cues at edges for children with visual differences.
- Allow extra time and offer a steady handhold for children with motor or balance differences.
Safety
- Supervise near steps, edges, and drop-offs, since judgment of danger is still developing.
Activities
Evidence
- Head Start Early Learning Outcomes Framework (ELOF) — U.S. Office of Head Start · 2015 · U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Early Atlas