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Archives for 2019

Rainbow Playdough Fine Motor Activity

By Sharla Kostelyk

Playdough is such a versatile sensory play material. This Rainbow Playdough Fine Motor Activity is great for helping little hands practise their dexterity. balls of coloured playdough are lined up to create a rainbow and a cloud with a small hand holding one of the blue balls of dough. The text reads "Rainbow Playdough fine motor activity"While at first glance, this activity may seem very simple, it has layers of learning within it. This play allows children the opportunity to learn or reenforce their knowledge of the order of the colours in the rainbow while practising their fine motor skills.

Rainbow Playdough Fine Motor Activity:

Supplies:

  • Playdough in red, orange, yellow, green, blue 2 shades of purple and white*

*you can either purchase Play Doh in those colours or make your own

Directions:

Invite your child to roll each colour of the playdough into small balls. If they have never done this before, show them how to pinch off a section, place it in the palm of one hand and roll it using the palm of the other hand.

After this is accomplished, invite your child to arrange the balls in the pattern of a rainbow. You can remind them what the order of the colours is either in words or by setting out pieces of paper in those colours or with the words of each colour written on them or by displaying a picture of a rainbow for them to compare to.

Sensory and Learning Opportunities:

Children will receive visual, tactile, and proprioceptive sensory input while participating in this activity. Expand the learning about rainbows. You can create an entire unit study on rainbows in your preschool or homeschool.

Set out books. Invite your child to draw, colour, or paint a rainbow. Watch videos about the science behind a rainbow.

Light: Shadows, Mirrors, and RainbowsLight: Shadows, Mirrors, and RainbowsLight: Shadows, Mirrors, and RainbowsChasing RainbowsChasing RainbowsChasing RainbowsRainbow In My Room Night Light ProjectorRainbow In My Room Night Light ProjectorRainbow In My Room Night Light ProjectorGrimm's Rainbow Wooden Nesting PuzzleGrimm’s Rainbow Wooden Nesting PuzzleGrimm's Rainbow Wooden Nesting PuzzleRainbowRainbowRainbowHow the Crayons Saved the RainbowHow the Crayons Saved the RainbowHow the Crayons Saved the Rainbow

Incorporate other rainbow activities such as these:

Erupting Rainbow Rocks – STEAM Powered Family

Rainbow in a Bag – Powerful Mothering

Math with a Rainbow Abacus – 123 Homeschool 4 Me

Sticky Rainbow Wall – Crafty Morning

Rainbow Salt Tray – Natural Beach Living

You may be interested in some of these activities:

Bath Time Sensory Bin

Seashell Fossils in Playdough

Filed Under: Crafts and Activities Tagged With: sensory play

Fall Leaves Slime

By Sharla Kostelyk

Fall happens to be my favourite season. The colours, the crisp cool air, and the feeling of change and new beginnings are what I love most. This fall leaves slime enables me to bring a bit of that feeling inside.a thumb and pointer finger grab at an orange leaf in a glittery white slime filled with orange and yellow leaves with text that reads "fall leaves slime"For this slime, I used maple leaf confetti that was leftover from the Fall Leaves Sensory Jar I made. By making both, I was able to get maximum use out of purchasing the confetti.

Slime is great for sensory input. It provides visual and tactile input and with the kneading and stretching, it also gives good proprioceptive feedback. These are an important part of your child’s day and slime provides a fun way to get them in.

Fall Leaves Slime

Supplies:

  • 6 oz. bottle clear Elmer’s Glue
  • approximately ¼ cup warm water
  • ½ tsp. baking soda
  • 1½ Tbsp. contact lens solution (be sure that it contains boric acid)
  • maple leaf foil confetti
  • optional: 1 ½ tablespoon glitter in copper, gold, and red

Directions:

  1. Empty the glue into a large bowl.
  2. Fill the empty glue bottle about ⅓ full with warm water (this will be about ¼ cup) and seal with the lid. Shake well to combine the remaining glue and water. Pour this mixture into the bowl with glue and stir to combine.
  3. Add the baking soda to the glue and mix thoroughly.
  4. If you are adding glitter, stir the glitter into the glue mixture in this step.
  5. Add the contact lens solution to the glue mixture and stir well. Add the contact lens solution slowly, mixing between additions. Only add enough to bring the glue together into a soft ball.
  6. Remove the slime from the bowl allowing any excess liquid to remain in the bowl. The slime will be sticky. Begin to play with the slime, kneading it as you would bread dough to bring the slime together. The slime is ready when it is no longer sticky.
  7. Set the maple leaf foil confetti on top of the slime and knead it in, stretching and pulling until everything is well combined.
  8. Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator when the slime isn’t being played with.

For a different look, you could also make this slime with glitter glue in place of the regular glue. This will create an entirely new look.

You may also be interested in these fall slimes and sensory activities:

Fall Leaves Sensory Jar

Simple Hallowe’en Glitter Slime

Pumpkin Scented Puffy Paint

Easy Fall Sensory Bottle

Filed Under: Sensory Tagged With: sensory play, slime

Fall Leaves Sensory Jar

By Sharla Kostelyk

This fall leaves sensory jar can be for sensory exploration or as an autumn decoration or both. Bring the colour and feel of the season inside.a jar is filled with a glittery yellow mixture with foil leaves visible in it. The lid is white with pine cones on top with a background of leaves in multiple colours with text that reads "Fall Leaves Sensory Jar"While we normally make sensory bottles in all kinds of themes, I thought a sensory jar might be a nice change. The size allows it to sit nicely on a mantle or counter as a decoration when it’s not being used as a sensory toy.

Fall Leaves Sensory Jar

Supplies:

  • 8 oz. plastic storage jar
  • 6 oz. bottle Elmer’s yellow glitter glue
  • approximately ½ cup warm water
  • 1 Tbsp. maple leaf foil confetti
  • optional: seasonal cupcake liner, washi tape, duct tape, or pine cones for decoration

Directions:

  1. Empty the yellow glitter glue into the jar.
  2. Fill the empty glue bottle about half full with warm water (about ¼ cup) and seal with the lid. Shake well to combine the remaining glue with the water. Pour into jar with the glue and stir to combine.
  3. Add the maple leaf confetti.
  4. Seal the jar and shake well. If the glitter or confetti don’t move easily, you can add more warm water. If the glitter or confetti move too quickly, you can add additional glue.
  5. When you’ve got things looking the way you want them to, seal the jar and glue the lid closed to avoid spills.
  6. If you want to, you can cover the lid with a cupcake liner, washi tape, seasonal duct tape, or other decoration. If you want to achieve the look of ours, use a hot glue gun to attach pine cones to the lid.

Note that supervision should be used when giving this jar to children as they will be able to get the lid off and that could make quite a mess! You also don’t want kids eating the contents of this jar so be sure to keep an eye on them with it.

You may be interested in some of other Fall themed sensory play activities:

Easy Fall Sensory Bag

Pumpkin Pie Scented Cloud Doughin a red plastic bin, light almost white cloud dough is sprinkled with fall coloured plastic leaves and small metallic leaf shaped confetti. There is also a metal scoop in the corner.

Fall Leaves Slime

Filed Under: Sensory Tagged With: sensory bottles, sensory play

How to Work Through Emotions with Your Toddler

there is a white couch with a pink pillow in the background. A blonde mom kneels in front holding her young son on her lap with her arms around him. The text reads "How to Work Through Emotions with Your Toddler"

By Sharla Kostelyk

Have you ever thought about how emotional your toddler can be? Toddlers are some of the most emotional creatures out there. Working through emotions with your toddler takes patience. It can help to remember that toddlers are new to this whole emotion thing and they don’t always know how to navigate those feelings, especially the big ones.there is a white couch with a pink pillow in the background. A blonde mom kneels in front holding her young son on her lap with her arms around him. The text reads "How to Work Through Emotions with Your Toddler"

Understanding Toddlers & Their Emotions

Having emotions is a part of being human. We may not always like the emotions that are coming out of our toddler or how they are being expressed, but that doesn’t make their emotions less important. Teaching a toddler to work through their emotions is one of the best parenting moves we can make. Here is how to work through emotions with your toddler:

Acknowledge How Your Toddler Feels

As an adult, you can define your feelings. Toddlers cannot always do that. When your toddler is sad, happy, mad, or upset – help them to acknowledge those feelings. When they can start understanding how they feel, this is a big deal! Don’t try and talk them out of how they feel. Help give them the vocabulary to be able to begin to express their emotions.

Give Your Toddler Tools to Work Through Emotions

Helping your toddler through their emotions can seem like a never ending task. However, they are looking to you to help them through this time period.

You’ll need to guide them through this. For example, if your toddler is mad, give them the tools to help them express their “madness.” Let them draw or even go outside and run around. Toddlers are often too young to be able to use words effectively to express themselves, so using their bodies in ways such as dancing, miming, marching, crawling, painting, or using sensory play.

Another tool that can be helpful with young children is to use puppets, dolls, or stuffed animals to act out different scenarios and the simple emotions and responses that would go along with those emotions.

It’s vital that we give our children tools to help them express their emotions and work through them.

Talk to Your Toddler About Their Emotions

Reassure your child that it is normal and healthy to have feelings. If a toddler is feeling happy or mad, talk to them about these emotions. When someone is happy, they are usually laughing, smiling, and carefree. When a person is mad, they may have a “frownie face” and they aren’t always easy to cheer up.

By talking to your child about their emotions, they start to recognize their own emotions and they will start saying “I am so happy.” “I am sad today.” It’s an amazing feeling to watch a toddler start to understand their emotions. You can use a chart to help them identify the emotion they are feeling at that time.

Practice Patience as You Help Your Toddler with Their Emotions

Sometimes when our toddler hits someone or has a tantrum, it can invoke anger in us. As parents, it’s vital that we don’t let our toddler’s emotions become our emotions. Parenting calmly and patiently is going to teach your child more an angry reaction ever will. That’s easier said than done, but so critical.

As parents, we are the people our children will learn from the most. If we’re struggling with our own emotions, we can’t effectively help them. If you find yourself struggling with anger, frustration, or negative behaviours in response to your emotions, it’s wise to seek counselling before you try and coach your toddler with their emotions.

How Do I Help a Toddler Through Their Emotions?

Now that you have some tips for helping a toddler through their emotions, you may need a few practical ideas you can apply to the situation.

  • Encourage your child.
  • Give your child praise.
  • Get your child on a good routine with mealtimes and bedtimes.
  • Help your child know what to do when they have emotions.
  • Let your toddler know that it is going to be okay.

How Can I Help My Child Express Their Feelings?

Expressing emotions is important and toddlers need to know how to express theirs. Here are some tips for helping your toddler express their emotions.

  • Listen to them as they talk.
  • Let them talk about their feelings.
  • Help them find a way to express those emotions (painting, a sport, dancing, breathing).
  • Talk about different feelings and words to describe those feelings.

Working through emotions with your toddler won’t stop when they’re 2, 3, or 4. You’ll need to help your child through different emotions at different ages. However, being a toddler is difficult because they don’t always have the right words or maturity to work through emotions.

What tips do you have for helping toddlers work through their emotions?

Join thousands of other people who have found help in our free 5 part email series, Little Hearts, Big Worries offering resources and hope for parents.

You may also be interested in reading these articles:

5 Things to Say to Your Anxious Toddler

Calming Your Child’s Fight, Flight, or Freeze Response

Filed Under: Parenting in the Chaos

At the Beach Nature Sensory Bottle

By Sharla Kostelyk

It’s so easy to create this At the Beach Nature Sensory Bottle. It makes a great memento of a tropical or beach vacation too. You can gather the items while on holiday and bring the bottle home with you to remember the trip by. a bottle half filled with white sand, seashells, green seaweed, and a seagull feather sits on a distressed paint table with a few larger seashells. The text reads "At the Beach Nature Sensory Bottle"

I love that this discovery bottle uses things found in nature. Just like our Seashell Fossils in Playdough activity, this allows kids to explore using their senses and items they found themselves.

At the Beach Nature Sensory Bottle:

Supplies:

  • empty water bottle (I like the look of Voss bottles, but you can also purchase these empty sensory bottles)
  • seashells
  • sand
  • seagull feathers
  • seaweed
  • optional: super glue to seal the bottle cap

Directions:

  1. Take a walk on the beach to collect the items you want to include in the sensory bottle.
  2. Wash the items (other than the sand) and lay them out on paper towels to dry. Be sure they are fully dry before adding them.
  3. Pour sand into the bottle until it is 1/4 to 1/3 of the way full. You can use a funnel to make this easier.*
  4. Drop in small seashells, small sand dollars, seaweed, and feathers. You could also add small driftwood or rocks found on your walk.

*If you are on vacation and don’t have a funnel with you (because who brings a funnel on vacation?!), you can roll up a piece of paper into a funnel and pour the sand through that.

You can keep your creation as a keepsake from your vacation. You can use a permanent marker to write the location and year on the bottle and display it in your home.

Sensory and Learning Opportunities:

Sensory: This sensory play activity begins with the walk along the beach. The feel of the sand under their feet, the wind on their skin, the sound of the waves, the smell of the sea all engage the senses.

The experience continues with adding the collected items to the bottle. This beach sensory bottle involves the visual and tactile sensory systems and during the walk, the olfactory and auditory systems. Science: This activity encourages children to explore the world as they get up close to the beach. You can expand on what they learn by providing books about sea life and seashells so that they can discover what animals lived in the shells at one time.

Children can use the books or the internet as a reference for reading about how sand is made, the benefits of eating seaweed, or any other questions they have about the beach or the ocean. Here are some books that would fit well:

The Beachcomber's CompanionThe Beachcomber’s CompanionThe Beachcomber's CompanionSeashells, Crabs and Sea StarsSeashells, Crabs and Sea StarsSeashells, Crabs and Sea StarsShells HandbookShells HandbookShells Handbook

Communication: Kids can expand their vocabulary as they learn about the ocean, sea life, and the beach on their walk. They can further that discussion when filling the bottle and exploring it afterwards. This gives them the opportunity to ask questions and to talk about their discoveries.

Other sensory play ideas using things found in nature:

Seashell Fossils in Playdough

Nature Sensory Bottle

Outdoor Sensory Scavenger Hunt

Nature Weavingnature weaving step by step

 

Filed Under: Sensory Tagged With: sensory bottles, sensory play

Bath Time Sensory Bin with Ice and Gelatin

By Sharla Kostelyk

I love how this sensory play activity came together. I was at the Dollar Store (where I find a lot of my sensory inspiration) when I saw the cutest mini bath toys. It gave me an idea for a bath time themed sensory bin. a child's hand holds a small bath toy above a white plastic bin filled with blue gelatin and balls of blue ice with other brightly coloured bath toys sitting on top of the jello. The text reads "Gelatin and Ice sensory play"I made the “water” out of gelatin that I dyed blue. When I added the bath toys, it looked good, but I felt like it was missing something. I wanted to create the look of bubbles in the “water” and I also wanted to add in another sensory dimension.

After considering a few ideas such as adding a layer of shaving cream to add another sensory element and to create the look of foam, I came up with a different plan. I decided to make round ice cubes and dye them blue. This would create the look of bubbles in the bath.

It would also add another sensory rich experience by adding cold and by allowing kids to explore different states of matter as the ice melted. I really love the way this sensory bin turned out!

Bath Time Sensory Bin:

Materials needed:

  • plastic bin
  • 4 packs of gelatin
  • blue food colouring
  • water
  • round ice cube holders
  • small bath toys
  • optional: plastic knives, spoons, or scoops

Directions:

  1. Make the gelatin according to the package directions, adding a few drops of blue food colouring to the water. Stir it directly in the bin. Allow to set. I put ours in the fridge to set.
  2. Mix some blue food colouring in a pitcher of water and pour into the round ice cube mould. Freeze.
  3. Add the bath toys to the bin on top of the gelatin once it has set.
  4. After the ice balls are fully frozen, place them in the bin.
  5. Let the play begin!

My kids enjoyed exploring in this bin. One of my daughters wanted to cut the shape of a fish out of the gelatin. She used a plastic knife and was easily able to cut out a jello fish. She later wanted to taste it. Since there’s no harm in that since it’s a taste safe sensory bin, she went ahead and took a bite. I hadn’t added any sugar to the gelatin, so she wasn’t a fan of the taste!

Sensory and Learning Opportunities:

The contrast of the moist, gummy gelatine and the cold, hard ice creates a really awesome sensory experience! This activity engages the visual, tactile, and gustatory (taste) sensory systems.

As kids explore through their senses, they learn about the world around them and about how to engage that world. They improve their communication by talking about what they are seeing, tasting, and feeling and by asking questions. Their vocabulary increases as they learn to describe certain textures, colours, or tastes.

Join thousands of others who have signed up for our Sensory Solutions and Activities email series and get a free sample from our Sensory Play Recipes eBook.

Here are some other toddler sensory activities you may be interested in:

Calming Bedtime Sensory Bottlea child's hands hold a blue calm down bottle. The child's hands are all that is visible as the child is snuggled underneath a green blanket.

Condensed Milk Painting

Edible Shark Fluffy Slime

Filed Under: Sensory Bins Tagged With: sensory play

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