The Learn to Play and Play to Learn Center Houston

Pediatric Therapy Services

Speech, Physical, and Occupational Therapy

Learn to Play Center Houston is an inpatient 501(c)(3) located in Houston, Texas. We offer a variety of multi-disciplinary pediatric therapy services including occupational therapy, physical therapy, speech therapy, and social work services to children of all ages in school and education settings.

Our Mission.

Our Passion.

Our Expertise.

At Learn to Play Center our mission is to help children participate in daily activities or “daily occupations” through play, sensory integrative techniques, therapeutic activities, manual therapy, neuromuscular re-education, and therapeutic exercise. We are passionate about having our patients experience the exhilarating beauty of growth and success. We provide school and teacher consultations and training for classroom carryover of therapy-related recommendations. We are committed to providing our patients with the highest level of care, compassion, and understanding. Our therapy approaches are research-based, using cutting-edge techniques, and the most updated methods in the field. Our team of highly-trained therapists have significant experience working across all areas of pediatrics, including feeding teams, and autism teams.

Frequently Asked Questions


What is the difference between OT and PT?

Both occupational and physical therapists work with children on their body movements, coordination, and participation in their environments. PT focuses on balance, strength, range of motion, gross motor skills, and endurance, while OT works on fine motor skills, visual perceptual skills, sensory processing, and activities of daily living.

What kind of challenges does therapy address?

Pediatric therapy addresses the needs of children to improve their functional participation in age appropriate movement patterns and activities. Some diagnoses that we address include autism spectrum disorder, gross and fine motor delays, sensory processing challenges, behavioral difficulties, genetic disorders, Down’s Syndrome, brain tumors, traumatic brain injury, cancer, high and low muscle tone, cerebral palsy, spinal cord injury, ADHD, concussions, seizures, developmental delay, torticollis, idiopathic toe walking, sports injury, and orthopedic injuries.