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Sharla Kostelyk

Calming Activities for Kids

By Sharla Kostelyk

Regulating emotional responses, particularly during times of stress or anxiety can be difficult. It is a skill that many adults have yet to master. It is a learned skill and something that requires practise. One of the ways to teach this skill to children is by teaching calm down techniques.

It is important for these activities and strategies to be practised regularly, not just in times of high anxiety. This ensures that they become second nature and can be accessed during times when big emotions come into play.

13 Calm Down Activities for Kids that really work #parenting #parentingtips #specialneeds

Calm Down Activities:

By far the most effective tool in our calm down toolkit has been our anti-anxiety kit. It has helped our daughter tremendously in regulating her big emotions and in teaching her strategies to calm herself. The techniques in the relaxation prompts have been invaluable.

Stress balls are easy to make. One of the nice things about them is that they can be carried in a backpack or purse or vehicle and always be accessible.

Calming bottles work well. Your child can watch them without even realizing that their breathing is slowing and they are becoming more relaxed. When I see one of my kids begin to get worked up, I will shake a calm down bottle and set it down in front of them and continue to talk to them. My child will then start to watch the falling glitter or sequins or beads as they listen to me. There is an almost instant decrease in their anxiety level.

Trampoline time. This idea may sound counter-intuitive since jumping may not exactly seem like a calming activity, but calming down and settling down are different things. Some kids need to get that proprioception sensory input in order to help themselves regulate. Jumping can be a good way to achieve this.

Using relaxation breathing strategies may sound simple, but it is incredibly effective. Find three calm down breathing techniques for kids here.

This calm down mini book provides some concrete strategies that really work. I like how it is small enough to be tucked into a pocket or backpack and used anywhere. If your child uses it often, you may want to laminate it to increase durability.

Blowing bubbles is a great calming strategy. It naturally causes a slow down in the child’s breathing pattern. This lavender scented bubble recipe also has the calming benefit of the soothing lavender.

These calm down yoga poses are specifically designed to help kids manage big emotions. Movement and a focus on breath team up to help your child regulate their emotions and bring them back to calm.

Listen to calming music or soothing sounds. We use a sound therapy machine that has many options for soothing sounds such as tropical forest, white noise, heartbeat, ocean waves, and waterfall.

Knead, press and pull lavender playdough. The kneading, pressing and pulling provides good sensory feedback and the smell of the lavender adds an extra element for relaxation.

Spend some quiet time in a sensory room or sensory space. If you don’t have access to a dedicated sensory space, you can easily create a temporary one by placing a sheet over a table and throwing a few items in there. Things you can include in this temporary calm down area are a soft blanket or weighted blanket depending on your child’s preference, twinkle lights or a lava lamp, a bean bag chair, fidgets, and a stress ball.

Have a warm bath with epsom salts. All children should be supervised in the bath of course. You can make this experience more soothing by using flameless candles in the bathroom or dimming the lights.

Inversion. Inversion is a fancy way of basically saying to get your head below the level of your heart. It has an almost instant calming effect. Inversion can be achieved by bending and touching your toes, doing a headstand or handstand, hang upside down on monkey bars, or hanging with your head off the couch.

Find more calming strategies as well as everything you need to understand and explain sensory in Sensory Processing Explained: a Handbook for Parents and Educators. 

Join me for a free 5 part email series, Little Hearts, Big Worries offering resources and hope for parents.

These calming techniques can work well to keep anxiety at bay, but if your child is already in the middle of a meltdown, then you will want to set aside these strategies for another time and pull out the ones outlined here:

5 Critical Steps to Take When Your Child Has a Meltdown

Filed Under: Sensory, Special Needs Parenting

Money Sensory Bag

By Sharla Kostelyk

I like to create sensory activities to go along with some of our homeschool unit studies. When it comes to subjects such as science or social studies, it’s easy to come up with a sensory play idea, but math is a bit harder. When I saw a package of money confetti, I knew immediately that I could use it to finally create a math themed sensory activity. I was able to create a Money Sensory Bottle and this Money Sensory Bag.

Money Sensory Bag - great addition to a unit study #math #sensoryMoney Sensory Bag

Materials needed:

  • resealable plastic bag
  • liquid hand soap
  • money confetti
  • optional: duct tape

This money sensory bag would be a great compliment to a math unit study on money.

To assemble the money sensory bag, fill a plastic bag half full with liquid hand soap. Dump in some of the money confetti. Take the extra air out of the bag and seal.

You can also seal the bag fully by using duct tape such as this green duct tape around all the edges. This is especially good to do if younger children will be playing with the sensory bag. Just like with all sensory activities, adult supervision is recommended at all times. 

You can use some of the other money confetti to create a money sensory bottle or a money sensory bin. This will enable you to have many sensory options or a little math money sensory station in the classroom or at home.

Join me for a free 5 part email series Sensory Solutions and Activities and get your Sensory System Behaviours Easy Reference Cards.

Squishy Sky Sensory BagArctic Sensory Bag

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

Christmas Sensory Bottles

By Sharla Kostelyk

These Christmas sensory bottles are sure to provide hours of discovery for kids. From snow globe sensory bottles to I-spy explorations to combining science and sensory, you will find all kinds of ideas for creating holiday sensory bottles here.

Sensory bottles can also have a calm down effect and with the excitement of Christmas approaching, that can certainly be a very good thing! Try creating one for yourself and you’ll discover what a gem they can be.

Christmas Sensory Bottles:

The essence of Christmas decor is captured in this Deconstructed Christmas Tree Sensory Bottle.

Kids can follow along with the Christmas story using this Nativity Sensory Bottle.

If you’re looking to create something festive but very simple, you can make this easy Christmas Tree Sensory Bottle.

If you’re a fan of the Dr. Seuss story How the Grinch Stole Christmas, you may want to make yourself a Grinch Sensory Bottle.

Christmas Counting I-Spy Discovery Bottle from here on The Chaos and The Clutter

Christmas Ornament Sensory Bottle from here on The Chaos and the Clutter

Floating Confetti Christmas Sensory Bottle from Teaching Mama

Jingle Bell Magnetic Sensory Bottle from Parenting Chaos

Christmas Tree in a Bottle from Sunny Day Family

Snow Globe Sensory Bottle at The Best Ideas for Kids

Liquid Density Christmas Science Bottle on Little Bins with Little Hands

Christmas I-Spy Bottle from Simple Play Ideas

Christmas Sensory Bottle from Teaching Mama

Christmas I-Spy Bottles from Little Bins for Little Hands

Magnetic Sensory Bottles from No Time for Flash Cards

Christmas Tree Calm Down Bottle at Stir the Wonder

Christmas Sensory Bottle for Babies and Toddlers from Laughing Kids Learn

Winter Sensory Bottles:

Melted Snowman Sensory Bottle from here on The Chaos and The Clutter

Snowflake Sensory Bottle from here on The Chaos and The Clutter

Arctic Sensory Bottle from here on The Chaos and The Clutter

Frozen Inspired Snowstorm Sensory Bottle at Rhythms of Play

Snowmen in a Snowstorm Sensory Bottle from Modern Preschool

Penguin Sensory Bottle from Teaching Mama

Snowman Sensory Bottle from Little Bins for Little Hands

Blizzard in a Bottle on No Time for Flash Cards

Winter Wonderland Snowflake Sensory Bottle from The Jenny Evolution

You may also be interested in these holiday sensory activities for kids:

Christmas Sensory BinsChristmas sensory activitiesChristmas Sensory Activities

Filed Under: Christmas, Sensory

Huge List of Outdoor Winter Sensory Activities

By Sharla Kostelyk

During the warm months, it’s easy to get outdoor sensory activities into your child’s schedule. It is much more difficult when the ground is covered by snow and the temperature is below freezing. These winter sensory activities are designed to provide much-needed sensory input during the cold months. Use these ideas to ensure your students or kids get outside and burn off that energy.

Huge List of Outdoor Winter Sensory Activities designed to get your kids enjoying the colder months tooGoing outside in the winter isn’t my favourite thing. Some of my kids completely love the winter. For one of them, the colder, the better. For the ones that feel the way I do about the cold though, I have to be creative in coming up with enticing ideas to get them to stay active in the winter. Just because it’s cold outside doesn’t mean that their need for sensory input goes away so it’s important to find ways to create winter sensory activities.

Outdoor Winter Sensory Activities

  • Snow Angels
  • Snowball Fights
  • Rolling Down a Hill in the Snow
  • Tobogganning
  • Make a snow fort – Just be sure to do this with adult supervision as it can be dangerous if children get caught under collapsed snow.
  • Stomp patterns or words into the snow
  • Have a contest to see who can roll the biggest snowball
  • Go snowshoeing
  • Try cross-country or downhill skiing
  • Go ice skating
  • Set up an obstacle course in your backyard
  • Build an igloo with a snow block maker or use milk cartons to make your own snow block maker
  • Build a toboggan run
  • Winter Nature Hike
  • Shovelling Snow (great heavy work activity!)
  • Play tag in the snow
  • Hide plastic coins under the snow and have kids hunt for buried treasure
  • Winter Scavenger Hunt
  • Pour boiled maple syrup on the snow to make taffy – this is a French Canadian winter tradition

More Outdoor Winter Sensory Activities

  • Make Mr. Potato Heads with Snow like they did at Happy Hooligans
  • Make and hang bird feeders
  • Taste Safe Ice Painting at Messy Little Monster
  • Make Snow Ice Cream
  • Winter Ice Jewels from Fireflies and Mud Pies
  • Build an Igloo from Kids’ Craft Room
  • Winter Ice Play from Learning and Exploring Through Play
  • Build Coloured Ice Sculptures in the Snow from Happy Hooligans
  • Glow Sticks in the Snow from Simple Fun for Kids
  • Winter Gardening at Megan Zeni
  • Make a Snow Volcano from Growing a Jewelled Rose
  • Exploring Animal Tracks in the Snow by KC Edventures with Kids
  • Snow Painting from Kids’ Craft Room
  • Make a Road in the Snow from How Wee Learn
  • Blow Frozen Bubbles – read how at Fireflies and Mud Pies

Once the weather warms up, you’ll want this list on hand:

50 Activities for Outdoor Sensory FunHuge List of Outdoor Summer Sensory Activities

Join me for a free 5 part email series Sensory Solutions and Activities and get your Sensory System Behaviours Easy Reference Cards.

Filed Under: Sensory Tagged With: sensory play

Calm Down Breathing for Kids

By Sharla Kostelyk

Teaching your child a few simple calm down strategies can make a big difference. The most basic one and perhaps the most important is breathing. Calm down breathing is a skill that is very effective when a child is under stress, struggling with anxiety or having a meltdown.

3 Calm Down Breathing Techniques for kids #parenting #specialneedsDeep breathing has been scientifically proven to combat stress and anxiety. It is used in meditation and yoga. With children, calm down breathing is an essential technique to learn to help with self-regulation.

When a child goes into their fight, flight or freeze response, their heart rate increases and their breathing becomes rapid and shallow. This decreases the oxygen to their cells, which obviously does not improve brain function in the moment. This makes it all the more important to practise good breathing technique and get that oxygen flowing well again.

These three calm down breathing techniques are extremely effective and easy to learn.

3 calm down breathing techniques:

  • Have your child put their hand on their stomach and feel the rise and fall while they breathe.
  • Have them inhale for 4 seconds, trying to fill their “belly balloon” with air, hold the breath for 2 seconds and then exhale.
  • Teach them to breathe slowly in through their nose, out through their mouth. The best way to teach this method is to have them make eye contact with you and do it at the same time as you while you give them the verbal cues of “in through your nose” and “out through your mouth”. I find this one especially helpful during a meltdown.

Teaching breathing techniques should be done while your child is already calm and can concentrate. Ideally, if you practise breathing techniques often enough, they become motor muscle memory and will be easier for your child to access during times of distress.

When they are distressed, you can give them scripts (“in through your nose, out through your mouth”, “fill your belly balloon” or “let’s breathe”) to help them along. These should be short and simple.

Blowing bubbles through a bubble wand or doing bubble painting is another way to practise calming breathing so that that motor muscle memory kicks in when those moments of fight-flight-freeze occur. Blowing softly to spin a pinwheel is another good way to practise calm down breathing.

Join me for a free 5 part email series, Little Hearts, Big Worries offering resources and hope for parents.

You can read about other calm down methods for kids here and get the relaxation prompts which are so helpful once your child learns how to use them.

Filed Under: Special Needs Parenting

The Big List of Christmas Playdough Mats

By Sharla Kostelyk

Playdough mats are an excellent sensory and learning experience for kids. With the holiday season approaching, I wanted to share these free Christmas Playdough Mats and playdough activities with you. It is such a big list of Christmas playdough mats!

With the holiday season approaching, I wanted to share these free Christmas Playdough Mats and playdough activities with you. It is such a big list of Christmas playdough mats!Playdough mats are a wonderful sensory and learning activity for kids. They also happen to be a great way to keep kids busy while you wrap gifts or do holiday baking or get the house cleaned up for all that company that may be coming your way.

Christmas Playdough Mats and Activities:

The Christmas Playdough Mats Activity from The Natural Homeschool includes cute playdough cards and suggestions for using things such as cranberries and glitter with the playdough.

Shaunna over at Fantastic Fun and Learning shares a Candy Cane Play Dough Writing Tray. What a neat Christmas sensory activity for preschoolers!

In this article from Schooling a Monkey, you’ll find Preschool STEM Challenges and Experiments using Christmas playdough.

These Christmas Playdough Mats at Totschooling are some of the cutest I have ever seen!

My favourite page of these printable from Picklebums is the Santa Needs Some Clothes.

Fantastic Fun and Learning has Free Printable Christmas Ornament Playdough Mats.

Sheryl at Teaching 2 & 3 Year Olds created an Easy Snowman Building Playdough Activity that needs very little set up.

For kids who are learning their numbers, these Christmas Tree Playdough Mats for Numbers 1-10 from Life Over C’s are a great fit.

For kids who are ready for addition, these Christmas Tree Math Playdough Mats at School Time Snippets are a fun way to learn.

This Playdough Christmas Tree Craft for Kids from The Educator’s Spin on It is really cute.

The Christmas Tree Counting Play Dough Mats over at Simple Fun for Kids combine a bit of learning in with the play.

These Free Christmas Playdough Mats from 123Homeschool4Me have a lot of variety.

This Decorate a Play Dough Christmas Tree kit made by Mama Papa Bubba would make a lovely gift to give. She’s also created an adorable Build Your Play Dough Snowman Kit.

With the holiday season approaching, I wanted to share these free Christmas Playdough Mats and playdough activities with you. It is such a big list of Christmas playdough mats!

More Christmas Playdough Mats:

Scented Christmas Day Playdough Recipe from Nurture Store

Christmas Tree Playdough from Homegrown Friends

Printable Christmas Playdough Mats from Emma Owl

Christmas Cookie Tray Counting Mats from 123 Homeschool 4 Me

Christmas Tree Playdough Mats at Simple Fun for Kids

Cute Christmas Counting Playdough Mats from Natural Beach Living

Christmas and Winter Playdough Mats from This Reading Mama

Counting Gumdrops Gingerbread Man Play Dough Mats from The Kindergarten Connection

Christmas Counting Mats from Pre-K Pages

If you’re looking for the perfect homemade playdough recipe to use with these Christmas playdough mats, I’ve got you covered! Check out these Christmas playdough recipes.

Filed Under: Christmas, Sensory

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