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Movement, Confidence And Active Play For Growing Children

Active Play

Children are designed to move. From climbing and balancing through to riding, exploring and outdoor adventures, active play helps children build confidence, coordination, body awareness and independence through movement. This hub is designed to help families understand the different pathways within active play so they can confidently choose experiences that support their child's interests, abilities and stage of development.

Explore Active Play Pathways

Different Children Need Different Types Of Movement

Active play is not one single activity. Some children seek climbing and adventure, while others are drawn to riding, balancing, outdoor exploration or developing movement skills at their own pace. Understanding these different pathways can help parents move beyond simply searching for active toys and instead choose experiences that support confidence, coordination, independence and healthy physical development. Explore the pathways below to discover active play opportunities that align with your child's interests, abilities and stage of development.


Understanding Active Play

Different Types Of Movement Support Different Skills

Active play is about far more than helping children burn energy. Different types of movement help children develop confidence, coordination, strength and body awareness in different ways. Some children seek climbing and adventure, while others enjoy balancing, riding, exploring outdoors or developing movement skills at their own pace. Understanding these pathways can help families choose active play experiences that align with their child's interests, abilities and stage of development

Confidence Through Movement Gross Motor Development Active Exploration Independent Play

Movement Builds Confidence

Every new physical challenge gives children an opportunity to test their abilities, develop resilience and build confidence through real-world experiences.

Children Need Different Types Of Movement

Some children seek climbing and adventure, while others prefer balancing, riding or outdoor exploration. Different movement experiences support different developmental pathways.

Active Play Supports Everyday Development

Movement helps children develop body awareness, coordination, spatial understanding and confidence that often extends into many other areas of life.

Explore Active Play Pathways

Find The Movement Experiences That Suit Your Child

Whether your child loves climbing, riding, balancing or outdoor adventures, these pathways can help you discover active play experiences that align with their interests and developmental stage.

Active Play Helps Children Build Confidence Through Movement
Confidence Through Movement
Movement Builds More Than Muscles

Active Play Helps Children Build Confidence Through Movement

Children learn about their capabilities through movement. Every climb, balance challenge, outdoor adventure and first ride provides an opportunity to develop confidence, resilience and independence. Active play allows children to test their abilities, assess challenges and experience the satisfaction that comes from mastering new skills. While physical development is an important outcome, active play also supports persistence, problem-solving and self-belief. The goal is not simply to keep children busy or help them burn energy. It is to create opportunities for meaningful movement experiences that help children feel capable, confident and connected to the world around them.

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Discover More Active Play Experiences

Every child approaches movement differently. Some are drawn to climbing and adventure, while others enjoy riding, balancing or outdoor exploration. Explore these active play collections to find experiences that support confidence, coordination and physical development through movement.

Frequently asked questions

Questions parents often ask

How can I encourage more active play without organised sports?

Many parents assume that physical activity requires organised sports, classes or structured programs. While these activities can be valuable, young children often benefit just as much from everyday opportunities to move, climb, balance, explore and play freely.

Active play does not need to feel like exercise. Children are often most engaged when movement occurs naturally through exploration and child-led play. Opportunities to climb, balance, ride, explore outdoors or navigate physical challenges can encourage movement while allowing children to follow their own interests and abilities.

Free movement experiences also allow children to develop confidence at their own pace. Without the pressure of competition or formal instruction, children can focus on experimentation, skill-building and enjoyment. This often helps create a positive relationship with physical activity that lasts beyond the early years.

For many families, the goal is not to raise athletes. It is to help children develop confidence in their bodies, enjoy movement and build healthy habits through everyday active play experiences that feel fun, engaging and meaningful.

What is the difference between active play and outdoor play?

Active play and outdoor play are closely related, but they are not exactly the same thing. Active play refers to any activity that encourages movement, physical engagement and gross motor development. This can happen indoors or outdoors and may involve climbing, balancing, riding, dancing, jumping or exploring movement in many different ways.

Outdoor play refers specifically to activities that take place outside. While many outdoor experiences naturally involve movement, not all outdoor play is necessarily active. Children may spend time observing nature, engaging in imaginative play or participating in quieter outdoor activities that involve less physical movement.

Likewise, active play can take place indoors through climbing, balancing, soft play, movement games and other physical activities. The location is less important than the opportunities children have to move, explore and challenge their physical abilities.

Both active play and outdoor play provide valuable developmental benefits. Many families find that combining the two creates a balanced approach that encourages movement, exploration, confidence and healthy physical development while allowing children to experience a variety of environments and challenges.

How does active play support gross motor skill development?

Gross motor skills refer to the large movements children use to control their bodies. These skills involve the muscles needed for activities such as walking, climbing, balancing, jumping, running, kicking and riding. Active play provides opportunities for children to practise these movements naturally while building strength, coordination and confidence.

As children encounter different movement experiences, they learn how to control their bodies in increasingly complex ways. Climbing may help develop strength and coordination, balancing activities encourage stability and body awareness, while outdoor exploration often supports agility, endurance and spatial understanding. Each type of movement contributes to a child's overall physical development.

Strong gross motor skills support many aspects of daily life. They help children participate confidently in playground activities, sports, school environments and social play. Physical confidence can also influence independence as children become more willing to explore new challenges and navigate unfamiliar environments.

Active play allows children to develop these skills through enjoyable, meaningful experiences rather than formal instruction, making movement an important foundation for healthy childhood development.

How much active play does a toddler need each day?

Most young children benefit from opportunities to move throughout the day rather than participating in one dedicated exercise session. Toddlers and preschoolers are naturally designed to learn through movement, exploration and physical play, which means active experiences should form part of their everyday routine whenever possible.

Active play can include many different types of movement. Climbing, balancing, riding, dancing, running, jumping and outdoor exploration all contribute to physical development while helping children build confidence and coordination. These experiences do not need to feel structured or organised. In many cases, child-led movement and free play provide some of the most valuable opportunities for development.

Parents often worry about whether their child is getting enough activity, particularly when screen time and indoor living become part of daily life. Rather than focusing on exact amounts, it is often more helpful to consider whether children have regular opportunities to move, explore and challenge themselves physically throughout the day. Variety is often just as important as quantity when supporting healthy movement habits.

What are the benefits of active play for toddlers and preschoolers?

Most young children benefit from opportunities to move throughout the day rather than participating in one dedicated exercise session. Toddlers and preschoolers are naturally designed to learn through movement, exploration and physical play, which means active experiences should form part of their everyday routine whenever possible.

Active play can include many different types of movement. Climbing, balancing, riding, dancing, running, jumping and outdoor exploration all contribute to physical development while helping children build confidence and coordination. These experiences do not need to feel structured or organised. In many cases, child-led movement and free play provide some of the most valuable opportunities for development.

Parents often worry about whether their child is getting enough activity, particularly when screen time and indoor living become part of daily life. Rather than focusing on exact amounts, it is often more helpful to consider whether children have regular opportunities to move, explore and challenge themselves physically throughout the day. Variety is often just as important as quantity when supporting healthy movement habits.