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The most common concern parents are flagging for children aged 5 to 12 is no longer speech. Here is what changed, and what families can do.
For decades, the top concern parents brought to pediatricians about their school-age children fell into a predictable cluster: speech delays, articulation, learning differences around reading and math. The pediatric system was built around those concerns. Screening tools, school services, insurance reimbursement, special education eligibility categories. All of it was calibrated to catch and treat the things parents were most likely to flag.
That has changed. And the change is one of the clearest findings in Coral Care's 2026 State of Pediatric Development.
What parents are flagging now
In our 2026 parent screener, completed by families across all 50 states, the leading concerns parents flag for children aged 5 to 12 are no longer speech. They are emotional regulation, executive function, and sensory overwhelm.
Two out of three parents flag trouble managing emotions when things do not go their child's way. Half flag overwhelm with homework or multi-step tasks. Nearly half flag constant fidgeting or inability to sit still. Forty-four percent flag disproportionate meltdowns or shutdowns. Forty-one percent flag overwhelm in loud or busy environments.
Speech is still present in this age band, but it has dropped. Roughly a third of parents flag trouble with finding the right words or expressing ideas clearly. About the same share flag missed social cues or difficulty making and keeping friends.
The dominant concern is no longer "my child cannot say what they mean." It is "my child cannot manage themselves in a school environment."
This is clinical, not behavioral
It would be easy to read these numbers as a story about "kids today" being more dysregulated, less disciplined, more entitled. We want to push back on that read directly.
What parents are describing are real developmental concerns. The skills involved (emotional regulation, executive function, sensory processing, daily living skills, the integration of all of these into school participation) are clinical domains that occupational therapists, speech-language pathologists, and developmental specialists treat. They show up in standardized assessments. They respond to evidence-based intervention. They are not character flaws.
What our clinical data confirms is that these are exactly the concerns showing up at evaluation. Across the sample of children aged 5 to 12 we evaluated, occupational therapy is the dominant clinical need. Among teens, the cross-domain pattern intensifies. More than a third of teenagers reaching Coral Care need two or more therapy services.
A child who melts down at homework time is not failing to try hard enough. A child who fidgets through every lesson is not being disrespectful. A child who shuts down in loud cafeterias is not being dramatic. These are kids whose nervous systems are doing the best they can in the environment they are being asked to function in.
Why the picture has shifted
Several structural changes in the last two decades show up clearly in this data.
The classroom most school-age children now spend six hours a day in does not resemble the classroom their parents experienced. Eighty-eight percent of US public schools operate one-to-one device programs. EdTech usage in schools has increased ninety-nine percent since 2020. One in three teachers reports being required by their district to use digital screens for instruction. Eighty-five percent of teachers used AI tools during the 2024-25 school year. Handwriting instruction has declined. Recess has shortened in many districts.
Teachers themselves are reporting the consequences. Seventy-two percent of educators say students misbehave "a little more" or "a lot more" than before 2019. Three-quarters of public school leaders report a moderate or severe negative impact on learning from student inattention. The 2024 NAEP results documented the worst eighth-grade reading scores on record.
Outside school, the texture of childhood has shifted too. Unstructured outdoor play among children aged 6 to 17 averages seven minutes per day. The casual neighborhood pickup game has been replaced by adult-organized, adult-coached, adult-scheduled activity. Sixty-six percent of parents rely on screens to occupy their child while they get things done. None of those parents are failing. Most have no other option.
The children developing in this environment are practicing certain skills constantly (screen navigation, structured activity, prompted compliance) and other skills rarely (unstructured self-direction, peer negotiation, sustained focus on non-digital tasks, regulation through movement and play). The pattern of concerns parents are now flagging at school age reflects which skills got practiced and which did not.
What parents can do
There is no single fix for a structural shift this broad. But there are concrete things that meaningfully help.
Let your child struggle more, in small ways, every day. The most common pattern we see in homes is well-intentioned parents doing things for their children that the children could do themselves, given more time. The reason is rarely permissive parenting. It is logistical compression. A working family has ninety minutes between dinner and bedtime, and the fastest path is to brush the teeth, pack the bag, and pick the book. Try, even once a day, picking one task and letting it take twice as long. The slow way is the way the skill builds.
Protect outside time, even when it is inconvenient. Twenty minutes of unstructured outside time, even in a small yard, beats an hour of any structured activity. Gross motor development, sensory regulation, attention restoration, and sleep all benefit. The barrier is real (working parents, neighborhoods that feel less safe, organized activities crowding the calendar) but treating outside time as non-negotiable is the single highest-leverage move most families can make.
Watch the screen at meltdown moments. The most consistent association we see clinically between screen use and regulation difficulty is the use of screens to soothe an already-dysregulated child. The screen works in the short term. It also denies the child the chance to practice self-regulation. If you find yourself reaching for a tablet to stop a meltdown, that is a signal. Not of failure. Of an opportunity for a different kind of practice.
Trust your gut on when to ask for help. The clearest signs that a developmental concern deserves professional evaluation are a regression (skills your child had and lost), a persistent gap of six months or more behind standard markers, daily life impairment that is widening rather than closing, or a worry that has been with you for more than a few months. Any of these is reason to talk with your pediatrician. If your pediatrician says "wait and see" and your worry stays with you, get a second opinion.
Why earlier matters
The single most consistent finding in pediatric developmental research is that earlier intervention produces better outcomes. The skills involved here, regulation, executive function, sensory processing, are not skills that resolve on their own. They are skills that get built through the right kind of practice with the right kind of support.
The school-age child struggling with emotions and homework today is the teen who will struggle with college and work tomorrow. Or, with the right intervention at the right time, the teen who will not. The window is open. It does not stay open forever.
Coral Care provides in-home pediatric occupational, physical, and speech therapy in nine states, in-network with major commercial insurance, with no diagnosis required to start. The full 2026 State of Pediatric Development report is available at joincoralcare.com.


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