What Makes an Activity Adult-Focused for People With Disabilities?
Here’s something that happens more often than it should: an adult with a disability shows up to a program, and the activities planned for the day look like they were designed for elementary school students. Coloring sheets with cartoon characters. Children’s music. Sticker charts. Decor from a kids’ party supply store.
These choices are usually well-intentioned. But they send a message – whether it’s meant or not – that the adults in the room aren’t really seen as adults. This post is about what adult-focused activities actually look like and why the distinction matters for dignity, engagement, and growth.
The Problem With “Childish” Programming
When activities are designed for children and given to adults, several things happen:
- It undermines dignity. Being handed a children’s worksheet when you’re 25 or 35 or 45 years old sends a clear message about how you’re being perceived.
- It reduces engagement. Adults are more likely to participate when activities feel relevant to their age and interests. Childish activities lead to boredom and disengagement.
- It reinforces stereotypes. When visitors, volunteers, or community members see adults doing children’s activities, it shapes how they think about people with disabilities.
- It limits growth. Activities designed for children don’t challenge adults in the ways that help them build real life skills, social connections, or personal confidence.
None of this means that art, music, or hands-on activities are off the table. It means they need to be designed with the adults in the room in mind.
What Adult-Focused Activities Look Like
Adult-focused doesn’t mean complicated. It means appropriate – in tone, in content, and in expectation. Here are some examples of how the same type of activity can be made adult-appropriate:
- Art: Instead of pre-drawn coloring pages, offer real canvas painting, pottery, or collage projects using interesting materials. The goal is self-expression, not staying inside the lines.
- Music: Instead of nursery rhymes, play music that participants actually enjoy. Build playlists together. Try drumming circles, karaoke with current songs, or music appreciation sessions.
- Cooking: Instead of decorating pre-made cookies, prepare a real meal together. Chop vegetables, follow a recipe, set the table. This builds practical life skills and gives a real sense of accomplishment.
- Fitness: Instead of “gym time” with playground equipment, offer yoga, walking groups, dance sessions, or adapted fitness classes with adult-appropriate instruction.
- Games: Instead of children’s board games, play trivia, card games, or group games that adults actually enjoy. Even classic board games can be great – as long as they’re the versions adults choose to play.
Explore the kinds of activities offered at Lennon’s House to see what adult-focused programming looks like in practice.
How to Tell If Activities Are Truly Adult-Focused
When you’re visiting a program, here are some things to look for:
- The supplies: Are they using real art materials, real kitchen tools, and real music? Or is everything plastic, pre-packaged, and clearly designed for children?
- The music and media: Is it what adults would choose to listen to or watch? Or is it a children’s playlist?
- The decor: Does the space feel like a place for adults? Or does it look like a preschool classroom?
- The language: Are staff using adult language and tone? Or do they talk to participants the way you’d talk to a young child?
- The expectations: Are participants being challenged at their level? Or is the bar set so low that nobody is growing?
Our programs page describes how we approach programming for adults and young adults with different abilities.
Adaptation Without Infantilization
Here’s a key distinction: adapting an activity for someone’s ability level is not the same as making it childish. A cooking activity can be adapted by pre-measuring ingredients, using adaptive tools, or breaking the recipe into simple steps – while still being a real, adult cooking experience.
The question isn’t whether an activity needs to be adapted. Many do, and that’s perfectly fine. The question is whether the adaptation respects the person’s age, interests, and dignity. If a 30-year-old would be embarrassed to have their friends see them doing the activity, it probably needs rethinking.
Why This Matters for Families
Families notice. When you visit a program and see your adult child treated like a child, it hurts – even if the staff are kind and well-meaning. You want your adult child to be seen for who they are: a grown person with interests, opinions, and a personality that deserves to be respected.
When you’re evaluating programs, pay attention to the details. The activities, the materials, the music, the tone – they all tell you something about how the program views the people it serves. Check our FAQ page for more about what to look for in a quality adult program.
You can also read about the difference a respectful, adult-focused approach makes on our impact page, or visit our page for families to learn more about what we believe every adult with disabilities deserves.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it okay if my adult child genuinely enjoys “childish” things?
Of course. Everyone has personal preferences, and there’s nothing wrong with liking cartoons, animated movies, or simple crafts. The issue isn’t individual taste – it’s when a program assumes all adults with disabilities want childish things and doesn’t offer age-appropriate alternatives. The key is having options.
How can I bring this up with a program without being confrontational?
Frame it as a question rather than a criticism. “I noticed the activities today seemed geared toward a younger group – do you have options that are more adult-focused?” Most programs will appreciate the feedback, especially if they haven’t thought about it before.
What if staff say they use childish materials because participants “like” them?
People tend to engage with what’s available to them. If the only option is a children’s coloring page, someone might color it – and appear to enjoy it – because there’s nothing else to do. That doesn’t mean they wouldn’t prefer something more appropriate if it were offered. A good program regularly introduces new, adult-friendly options and pays attention to what genuinely resonates.
Does adult-focused mean the activities are harder?
Not necessarily. Adult-focused means the activity is designed with adults in mind – in its content, tone, and style. It can be adapted to any ability level while still being respectful and age-appropriate. The difficulty should match the person; the style should match their age.