Playworks Learning and Development Center

Playworks Learning and Development Center Services Offered:
- Occupational Therapy
- Speech Therapy
- Early Intervention
- Playgroups

Developmental Milestone Checklist💜🩷💚
03/06/2026

Developmental Milestone Checklist💜🩷💚

29/05/2026
To all Speech and Language Pathology board takers, on a day that also celebrates SLPs, you are already part of something...
18/05/2026

To all Speech and Language Pathology board takers, on a day that also celebrates SLPs, you are already part of something bigger. 💜🩷💚

Rooting for you. Future SLPs, this is your moment.

13/05/2026

Imagine you're planning to make lasagna for supper, or something similarly complicated. You go to the store and buy all the ingredients, take the meat out of the freezer, and then you go to work.

But then work didn't go the way you expected. You were short-staffed, you spent all day on your feet, a coworker was rude to you, and you didn't have time to eat your lunch. When you get home, you're exhausted and starving. You now can't imagine spending an hour making lasagna and then cleaning up afterward. So.. you ACCOMMODATE yourself and order a pizza.

You didn't forget how to make lasagna. You still have all the ingredients for lasagna. You can make lasagna tomorrow. You might even technically WANT to make lasagna. You just don't have the capacity for it right now.

But you aren't lazy for not making lasagna. Nobody tells you that you are being manipulative or that you just need more discipline because you decided to order pizza. Adults extend themselves grace for exactly this kind of capacity shift all the time.

People's abilities don't have one steady baseline. They shift and change constantly, on multiple overlapping timescales, and the pattern is different for everyone.

This is called fluctuating capacity.

For some people, fluctuating capacity means they might handle a complex task one day and then struggle with basic self-care the next, or move between different levels of functioning within the same day, the same hour, even the same conversation.

Within a single day, capacity rises and falls based on accumulated demands, sensory input, food, hydration, transitions, and how much masking or effort someone has already done.

Day to day, sleep quality, what happened the day before, whether they are feeling well, where they are in their cycle, if applicable, and lingering effects from a big event can all change what is available.

Capacity depends on factors like sleep, sensory load, accumulated demands, illness, hormonal cycles, emotional state, environment, and how much the person has already had to mask or push through that day.

In kids, fluctuating capacity often looks like a child who can do something one moment and genuinely cannot do that same thing a short time later. The skill hasn't disappeared, but their access to it has.

A child who had a great Monday can be wiped out on Tuesday from the cost of that good day.

For kids, this could show up in various ways

✱ A kid who can write a full paragraph on Monday stares at a blank page on Wednesday and cannot get a single sentence out.

✱ A child who normally tolerates the tag in their shirt but then suddenly cannot bear it. Sensory thresholds can shift with capacity.

✱ A child who sometimes handles self-care tasks like brushing teeth, getting dressed, putting on shoes, but other times doesn't

✱ Language can also come and go. A kid who chats freely in the morning might give one-word answers by afternoon

These are all situations that involve the same kid, same skill, but different available capacity. Just like in the lasagna analogy.

When capacity fluctuates, you might notice skills requiring executive function, planning, sequencing, starting tasks, switching activities, are often times the first to go. Or, you might see emotional regulation drops, like crying or becoming frustrated more easily/quickly.

When adults don't recognize what's going on, this might feel confusing or frustrating. They might think the child is being lazy, or manipulative, or attention-seeking, or maybe it's a regression, or a behavior problem, or they're simply choosing not to what you want or expect.

But, it's none of those things.

They're still just a child doing the best they can with what they have in the moment, but in this moment, their nervous system has less to give, so skills are going offline.

We can't treat kids' best moments as their baseline. That is actually the ceiling, and the ceiling moves.

💜
13/05/2026

💜

When we talk about getting curious about “what’s underneath behavior”, we’re rarely talking about one tidy bucket of “unmet needs.” Often, it’s a stack of systems that are all running at once, all the time, and all feeding into the same nervous system. And it’s often “invisible” to the child, in the sense that they aren’t able to accurately conceptualize and verbalize the experience.

If you think about this using the analogy of a volcano, what we can see is the “eruption”, that eruption is the end of or result of something, but what we don’t see is everything going on inside the magma chamber (inside of the child). An eruption is loud, visible, and it’s the thing adults react to. But by the time that eruption happens, pressure has been building inside that magma chamber for a long time.

Closest to the surface is the nervous system itself. Nervous systems are constantly scanning for safety. This is called neuroception, and it happens below conscious awareness. The body decides if a situation is safe, dangerous, or life-threatening before the thinking part of the brain ever weighs in. So by the time a kid is in fight, flight, freeze, or fawn, their body has already made that call without them.

Below the nervous system is the sensory layer. Every kid is running their own uniquely coded sensory system that's processing input constantly: lights, sound, temperature, textures, smells, movement, and where their body is in space. Sensory needs are individual, dynamic, and shift with fatigue, stress, illness, and hormones.

The next layer is unmet needs, which includes physiological needs (sleep, hydration, hunger, blood sugar, movement, needing to use the washroom), relational needs (connection, comfort, social belonging, co-regulation, repair after rupture), and developmental needs (autonomy, predictability, competence, agency, downtime).

Children often cannot identify and name these needs in the moment, which means they rely on us to do the tracking and troubleshooting.

Below that layer is communication frustration. Every child communicates. Speech is one channel of communication among many, often not the most important one, and for a significant number of children, not their channel at all. Even for speaking children, expressive language becomes harder to access under stress, and the words for complex inner experiences may not be developed yet.

Many kids communicate clearly through behavior, movement, gesture, stimming, AAC, etc long before an "eruption" happens.

Communication frustration is what builds when a child's communication, whatever shape it takes, isn't being received and understood by the adults around them.

And stacked across all of these layers is accumulated load. Stress doesn't reset between events, it accumulates. This is easy to underestimate and easy to overlook, especially when adults are looking at the eruption and trying to figure out "what set them off." The answer to that questions is often "everything before this moment, plus this moment. "

And at the foundation, the bedrock of the whole mountain that everything else sits on: these are kids who are still developing.

The skills required to navigate daily life are vast, and they develop unevenly, on no fixed timeline. There is no synchronized clock between children, or even within the same child. Capacity to access skills also fluctuates day to day, hour to hour, based on sleep, stress, illness, and accumulated demand. And yesterday's success doesn't prove the skill is locked in. It only shows that yesterday's conditions allowed access to it.

And the deepest WHY:

Children develop self-regulation through co-regulation with safe adults. They do not learn to regulate by being left alone in their dysregulation, and they do not learn it by being punished for it.

They learn it by borrowing our regulated state, over and over and over and over (and over and over and over) until their own system builds the wiring to do it.

Every “eruption” met with calm presence is a deposit in that wiring. Every eruption met with punishment or withdrawal teaches the body that dysregulation equals disconnection, which makes the next eruption bigger because now the child is dysregulated AND scared of being alone in it.

So when we say "underneath the eruption is where the child needs us most," we mean it literally. The child's nervous system is asking for a co-regulator. That's the developmental task. That's how the wiring gets built. That's the WHY.

As the adults, we HAVE TO put this work in for the kids in our lives.

The “behavior” we see is the smallest yet loudest, most misleading part of the whole story. The real child, the real need, the real opportunity, all of it is underneath, inside the magma chamber.

And the adults who learn to look there are the ones who truly help kids grow the capacity they're being asked to demonstrate.

Play works😃💜
07/05/2026

Play works😃💜

𝗣𝗹𝗮𝘆 𝗶𝘀 𝗻𝗼𝘁 𝗷𝘂𝘀𝘁 𝗳𝘂𝗻, 𝗶𝘁'𝘀 𝗳𝗼𝘂𝗻𝗱𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝗮𝗹!
From solo play to parallel play, pretend play to sensory play, each type of play creates opportunities for meaningful growth and development.

What may appear simple on the surface is actually powerful developmental work. In DIRFloortime, play allows us to meet a child where they are and expand their developmental capacities through meaningful, shared interactions.

💜
06/05/2026

💜

When a child is melting down, our instincts can take over — and not always the helpful ones.

We might lecture, rush to fix, or tell them to calm down… but these actually block co-regulation rather than build it.

Let’s talk about what not to do — and what to try instead — so we can truly help a child borrow our calm instead of our chaos.

via The Contented Child, Child Wellbeing Consultancy

28/04/2026

Have you ever seen a child that says it HURTS to color? Or one that picks up a new color way too often? Or an older kiddo that uses their whole arm/elbow/wrist to color? All of these are signs of hand weakness that impacts the functional task of coloring! 🖍

New on the website is a comprehensive resource on all things coloring. It includes:
•Reasons kids don’t like to color
•Skills needed for coloring
•Coloring skills by age
•How to set up a child for success from a young age
•Coloring skills for toddlers
•How to teach toddlers to color
•Coloring skills for preschoolers (3-4 years)
•How to teach preschoolers to color
•Coloring skills for preschool/Pre-K (4-5 years)
•How to teach coloring to Pre-K kids
•Coloring skills for elementary children
•How to teach coloring to older kids

Go check it out! https://www.theottoolbox.com/how-to-teach-coloring-skills/ 🖍

24/12/2025

From our Playworks fam to yours entry 2025 💜💚 Merry Christmas! Happy Birthday, Jesus! 🩸🐑

🫰🫶💜
17/12/2025

🫰🫶💜

𝗪𝗵𝗮𝘁 𝗶𝘀 𝗰𝗿𝗼𝘀𝘀𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗺𝗶𝗱𝗹𝗶𝗻𝗲?
These age-appropriate activities target midline crossing and are great for motor planning, visual motor skills, and brain breaks for the preschool age. https://www.theottoolbox.com/crossing-midline-activities-for-preschoolers/

There are some early warning signs we might see in the preschooler who struggles with crossing their midline. When we see a difficulty with the integrated motor patterns, this can be an indicator for various challenges.

🚩Some of the ways that difficulties with preschool crossing midline will present as:

>>Not developing a dominant hand. Students use the left hand for left sided tasks and the right side for right sided tasks.
>>Showing delays in crawling, or an atypical crawling pattern.
>>Rotating or turning their entire body to retrieve objects on the other side of their body instead of reaching across the body to the other side
>>Having difficulty with age-appropriate self-care tasks like dressing or grooming activities
>>Skipping or doing jumping jacks in an uncoordinated manner.
>>Difficulty making a horizontal line across a piece of paper (may stop in the middle and switch hands, or pause visually) or forming letters
>>Visual perceptual difficulties
>>Challenges with age-appropriate literacy skills (identifying letters, following pictures in a story- due to difficulty with visual tracking across the midline.

If you see these things in the preschool years, it's ok! Kids develop at different rates. Try adding some play ideas that target these gross motor movements. Here are more ideas: https://www.theottoolbox.com/crossing-midline-activities-for-preschoolers/

Address

Anabu 1B Aguinaldo Highway
Imus
4103

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+639175470035

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Playworks Learning and Development Center posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to Playworks Learning and Development Center:

Share