Back to All Posts

How to Make Therapeutic Work Fun for Pediatric Clients

Medbridge collaborates with industry-leading experts to provide clinicians and healthcare organizations with evidence-based content that enhances clinical excellence, engages patients, and improves outcomes.

July 3, 2017

3 min. read

Engaging clients to be active participants in their own intervention is a cornerstone of occupational therapy.1 A challenge with pediatric clients is that the child often is tired of working hard all the time and just wants to play.

The desire to play and have fun is natural and understandable but there are practical considerations too. The child is in therapy for goals that require work such as independence in ADLs, writing, cutting, chores, etc. Since many children cannot understand how important these needs are, they may not cooperate in addressing them. In the worst case, a child may actively resist therapy.

Making therapeutic work fun requires creative clinical reasoning on the part of occupational therapy practitioners.4

Use Strengths: Interests and Abilities

We all get discouraged when a pediatric client isnt interested. However, when we take a step back, we can find activities the child can do and wants to do.6-9 These interests and abilities are strengths that can provide a foundation for engaging clients and is supported as an evidence-based practice for children with ASD.2,3,10,11

For example, if a child is interested in superheroes, clients can pretend to be fighting bad guys, rescuing good guys, or training to be superheroes (AKA exercises). If a child likes the color orange, then orange ribbon, paper, markers, and toys can be incorporated into many activities. If a child is good at reading, steps or concepts can be written down on cards with therapeutic activities. If a child has a wealth of knowledge about animals, the child can share this information while doing motor activities. All strengths have potential to motivate engagement in occupational therapy.10

Recreate Activities: Same, but Different

Sometimes, including a single interest is not enough to engage the child in the therapeutic activity. The same activity, performed in the same way, does not work for all clients. Nonetheless, the same therapeutic activity can potentially meet the needs of multiple clients if each participates.

When a child does not participate, then we can recreate the activity so that the child will participate.4,5 We can redesign the activity into one that is fun and that the child wants to do by modifying aspects of the activity:

  • Materials

  • Sensory features

  • Required motor actions

  • Social factors

  • Cognitive components

Using multiple strengths and interests in each of these areas can enhance the childs willingness to participate in therapy. The core activity remains the same and retains its therapeutic essence, but the activity is seen differently by the client.4,8,9

Play Engages

Occupational therapy becomes fun and motivating for pediatric clients when their interests and strengths are included. They move from disinterest to interest. Once engaged, a child develops skills. With skills, the child gains new abilities that encourage further engagement in therapy often with lessening customization from us.


Below, watch Susan Spitzer discuss a case study of integrating a child's interest and recreating a therapeutic activity in a short video from her course, Making Play Out of Work: Engaging Children.

Meet the Author

Subscribe to Our Newsletter