W sitting

What is W-Sitting?

  • A child is in a W-Sitting position when they are sitting on their bottom with both knees bent and their legs rotated away from the body
  • If you stand above the child and look down, it looks like their legs are forming a “W”

Why do Kids W-Sit?

  • Children with poor balance or weak abdominal, hip, and/or trunk muscles prefer this position because it offers a wider base of support, which is used as a compensatory strategy so that they do not have to work hard to activate their muscles during play
  • It is very common for children to move in and out of this position when playing on the floor – however, the problem arises when the child chooses to sit like this for an extended amount of time.

What’s the Problem?

  • Increases risk of hip and leg muscles becoming short and tight – this negatively impacts coordination, balance, development of gross motor skills, and may lead to ‘pigeon-toed’ walking
  • Can cause back, pelvis, and/or joint pain
  • Less core muscle activation is required to maintain the position – enforcing weak/poor muscle development
  • Delays development of a hand preference
  • Limits ability to shift weight from side to side – this negatively impacts the development of balance reactions, ability to reach across the body to perform tasks that involve both hands, and ability to cross midline; this can negatively impact their ability to perform writing skills and other important school-related table top activities

Solutions to W-Sitting

  • Alternative ways to sit à long sitting (legs out in front), side sitting (to either side), crisscross/tailor sitting, tall kneel, or sitting on a low bench or stool
  • Core muscle strengthening à sitting on an exercise/physio-ball, crawling through a tunnel, swimming, bouncing (hopscotch/trampoline)
  • Hip stretching à butterfly, piriformis, child’s pose
  • Repetition and consistency with verbal cues – i.e. “fix your legs” or “criss-cross-applesauce”

Web Resources

Blog submitted by,

Jay Manix, Occupational Therapy Intern

Recent Posts

May Header

May 2024 Programs & Events

May is a little on the quiet side as we gear up for all the summer programs and events but there are still some great...

April 2024 Best of All

As April comes to a close, we're looking back with smiles and hope! Participant Best of All Recently, Amelia’s big sister Grace attended a speech...
20231004_172750

3 Tips for Articulating Policy

The Conversation Corner, By Brook Fieldman  Part 8 of 8 – This is the last post in this series of blog posts on supporting, encouraging,...

Leave a Comment