Sep 26

Learning in motion: why sitting still at school doesn’t work for SEN children

A classroom unchanged

There’s a video circulating online that makes a powerful point.

It shows a car from 100 years ago next to a modern one, sleek, safe, and transformed.

Then it compares the first telephone with a smartphone, almost unrecognisable in design and function.

Finally, it shows a classroom from 100 years ago, followed by one today. There is almost no difference. Children are still seated in rows. A teacher stands at the front. Desks, boards, and long stretches of sitting still define the day.

Despite all we know about child development and the power and importance of movement, the school environment has barely shifted.

So here’s my question: if we know movement is vital for learning, why isn’t the school day designed around it?

The reality of movement in schools

In the UK, the government recommends at least two hours of physical education (PE) each week. We know that just 20 minutes of physical activity can improve concentration, memory, and classroom behaviour. The likes of Joe Wicks have built a whole career around this concept.

However, with school days lasting 6.5 to 7 hours, and only 45 minutes to 1.25 hours of break time (which may not be active at all), that leaves around 5.5 to 6 hours of lessons a day, nearly all of them sitting still.

For neurodiverse children, including those with ADHD or dyspraxia, the benefits are even more pronounced. Movement for ADHD is often not a want but a must, as movement, whether gross movements such as walking or jumping or micro movements like fidgeting actually enables the brain to concentrate on a task like maths.

Why movement matters

Movement is not a distraction from learning, it can be a help. It supports children in four essential ways:

Brain development and learning:

Exercise boosts blood flow and oxygen to the brain, improving concentration, memory, and problem-solving.

Neural connections grow stronger with movement, particularly in areas linked to attention and executive function.

Multi-sensory learning sticks better acting out a story or moving through a maths problem deepens understanding.

Focus and behaviour:

Short bursts of movement help children manage restlessness and return calmer to tasks.

Stretching, jumping, or dancing resets focus and reduces fidgeting.

Physical activity supports self-regulation, helping children manage emotions and impulses.

Physical development:

Running, climbing, and balancing build essential motor skills.

Stronger muscles support stamina and posture, making writing and sitting more comfortably.

Social and emotional wellbeing:

Movement encourages teamwork, turn-taking, and cooperation.

Learning new skills builds confidence that carries over into academic work.

Exercise lowers stress hormones, helping children feel calmer and more open to learning.

Beyond PE: the power of dance

If we take movement a step further, we arrive at dance.

Dance combines rhythm, coordination, and expression. It not only strengthens the body but also supports proprioception, our sense of where our body is in space .This is especially valuable for children with dyspraxia, who may find coordination challenging.

Dance also helps children connect with interception, the awareness of the body’s internal signals, like a racing heart when anxious or the calm of deep breathing. For neurodiverse children, strengthening interoception can support emotional regulation and impulse control.

But dance offers something even more: expression. Joy, anger, pride, or sadness can be communicated through movement in ways words sometimes cannot. For children who struggle to put feelings into speech, dance provides a safe and creative outlet where their mask can be put to one side and they can be themselves or experiment with a different mask without judgement or fear.

Stories from practice

In schools where movement breaks and dance therapy have been introduced, teachers report fewer behavioural disruptions, greater engagement, and higher confidence among pupils.

One study by Nottingham Trent University, with children aged 6-7, saw improvements in maths ability of around 17% when introducing physically active maths lessons compared with traditional teaching.

In my own experience working with families, I’ve seen how a few minutes of dance or movement can transform a child’s energy and ability to engage and concentrate. A child who entered a room restless and frustrated leaves calmer, smiling, and ready to focus. That shift isn’t a coincidence, it’s science in action.

Time for change

We’ve upgraded our cars, our phones, even the way we shop and connect. Yet we’re asking children to learn in classrooms that look almost identical to those their great-grandparents sat in.

For too long, stillness has been equated with learning and “good-behaviour”. But children don’t thrive when they’re forced to stay still for hours. They thrive when their bodies and minds are both engaged and connected.

Movement and dance aren’t extras. They’re tools that unlock attention, confidence, and connection, especially for neurodiverse learners who often find traditional classroom structures restrictive.

So what would I like to see in all schools, for all children?

Imagine a school day designed around movement:
Maths taught through jumping games.
Literacy reinforced with drama and role-play.
Short dance sessions between lessons to reset focus.
Classrooms where it’s normal to stand, stretch, or pace while learning.

The University of Sydney looked at the importance of a 5- minute brain break after 25 minutes of deep concentration in order to refresh your mind. This is known as the The Pomodoro Technique. For younger children 25 minutes of concentrated work may still be too long but if a class is 35 minutes long, a 15 minutes timer being set for deep concentration followed by a 5 minute brain break, ideally movement is shown to reset the brains ability to concentrate on the second half of the lesson.

This vision isn’t radical, it’s achievable and it’s backed by evidence.

Movement supports brain function, social skills, and wellbeing. Dance deepens body awareness, emotional expression, and confidence. Together, they can transform the classroom from a static space into one that celebrates learning in motion.

Final thought

As we prepare for the future of education, let’s take a lesson from the video of the unchanged classroom. Movement and dance are not distractions from academic learning, they are pathways to it.

For neurodiverse children, especially, the stakes are high. By embedding exercise and creative movement into everyday teaching, we not only support better outcomes but also create classrooms where every child feels included, capable, and celebrated.

For more practical tools, the twigged Toolkit for ADHD includes evidence-based strategies for managing anxiety alongside ADHD traits, designed for home and school life. Try the Free Taster now!
gee eltringham

The founder

I started twigged out of both personal urgency and professional insight.
As The Toolkit Therapist and parent to a neurodivergent child, I experienced first hand the overwhelm and isolation families often face after a diagnosis.
Frustrated by the lack of practical, empathetic support, I set out to create what I couldn’t find: simple, evidence-based tools that make everyday life easier.
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