This is a demo store. No orders will be fulfilled.

Tagged with 'toddlers'

Toys for Talking- Peekaboo Learning Farm

The Learning Resources Peekaboo Learning Farm is my daughter's new favorite toy, and I can't say that I'm surprised!  It makes learning so much fun, and there are a multitude of ways to play with it.  Her favorites include making me sing Old McDonald while she opens up each barn and matching the animal finger puppets to the pictures in one of her farm themed books (Click here for our favorite!).  Like I said...so many opportunities. 

What does the Peekaboo Learning Farm include?

  • 5 colorful barns
  • 5 adorable finger puppet farm animals (cow, horse, pig, chicken & mouse)

How do you use the Peekaboo Learning Farm?

The Peekaboo Learning Farm includes numbered, colorful barns that can be used to work on color identification, counting, matching, sorting, and more.  Children are able to develop their fine motor skills by opening the colorful barns to find a farm animal finger puppet inside. The Peekaboo Learning Farm even encourages children to engage in imaginative play.

Where can I find it?

You can find it at Learning Resources HERE or at Amazon HERE

How can you use the Peekaboo Learning Farm to encourage speech and language development?

For receptive language development?

  1. Following directions:  Make following directions fun with the Peekaboo Learning Farm.  Have your child follow directions, such as, "give me the chicken," "open the blue barn," or even  "take out the mouse and make him eat."
  2. Answering Yes/No questions:  Before having the ability to answer Wh- questions, your child must be able to answer yes/no questions regarding things they want, objects, and actions.  If your child is working on the concepts of yes and no, ask your child, "do you want the blue barn?" You could also make it a little silly to see if your child can answer yes/no questions regarding the function of the Peekaboo Learning Farm (Examples: should I eat the barn?  should I kiss the cow? should I open the barn?). Want another fun idea? Pair this toy with a farm themed book. Look at the animals on the pages of the book, and ask your child if they match the animals in the barns (i.e., "Is this a pig?").
  3. Answering Wh- questions: Work on who, what, where & why questions while playing.  Build comprehension by asking your child questions like "what is the mouse doing?," "who is in the red barn?," "where is the pig?," "why is the pig sleeping?" etc.
  4. Understanding spatial concepts (in/on/off/out):  Work on these early developing spatial concepts by having your child take the roof off the barn, putting the roof on the barn, taking the animals out of the barn, or putting the animal back in the barn.
  5. Building memory skills: Play a memory game!  Hide the animals in the different color barns, and see if your child can remember which animal is in which barn.  Then have your child hide them for you to guess!  

For expressive language development?

  1. Practice animal sounds:  Learning animal sounds is fun, plus animal sounds are often comprised of early developing sounds, making them easier for children to say!  Encourage your child to imitate you saying each animal sound. You can even try singing Old McDonald while opening up each barn. Be sure to pause at the end of the song, and wait for your child to fill in the blank (Example: here a moo, there a moo, everywhere a....)!
  2. Farm animal vocabulary:  Talk about the different farm animals in each barn, and see if your child can label them.  
  3. Requesting: Have your child request for the barns, animals or to open each barn.  Depending on how much expressive language they have, they could use a simple word such as, "open" or "more," or a phrase or sentence like, "I want open" or "Can I have the purple barn?"
  4. Commenting:  Encourage your child to comment throughout play.  Model appropriate comments while playing with your child.  Use language like, "I see a blue barn, what do you see?"
  5. Use of prepositional phrases: Place the animals in different locations and have your child use phrases to describe their locations.  Put them in the barn, out of the barn, on the roof, or behind the barn.
  6. Vocabulary of action words: Pretend that the animals are doing different things and ask your child what each animal is doing.  Depending on your child's vocabulary, you can focus on simple verbs like eat, sleep, and drink, or be more creative and use of verbs like swing, hop and slide.

For play development?

  1. Pretend play:  These barns provide so many pretend play opportunities.  Children can use their imaginations to pretend that the animals are eating, sleeping, playing, or even having a birthday party!  The possibilities are endless!

For social language development?

  1. Turn taking: Develop turn taking abilities by asking your child if you can have a turn opening the barns.   
  2. Asking questions:  Model appropriate questioning during play by asking your child questions like, "What barn do you think the cow is in?" or "What is your favorite color barn?"  Encourage them to ask you questions back!
Toys for Talking- Peekaboo Learning Farm The Learning Resources Peekaboo Learning Farm is my daughter's new favorite toy, and I can't say that I'm surprised!  It makes learning so much fun, and there are a multitude of ways to play with it.  Her favorites include making me sing Old McDonald while she opens up each barn and matching the animal finger puppets to the pictures in one of her farm themed books (Click here for our favorite!).  Like I said...so many opportunities. 

What does the Peekaboo Learning Farm include?

  • 5 colorful barns
  • 5 adorable finger puppet farm animals (cow, horse, pig, chicken & mouse)

How do you use the Peekaboo Learning Farm?

The Peekaboo Learning Farm includes numbered, colorful barns that can be used to work on color identification, counting, matching, sorting, and more.  Children are able to develop their fine motor skills by opening the colorful barns to find a farm animal finger puppet inside. The Peekaboo Learning Farm even encourages children to engage in imaginative play.

Where can I find it?

You can find it at Learning Resources HERE or at Amazon HERE

How can you use the Peekaboo Learning Farm to encourage speech and language development?

For receptive language development?

  1. Following directions:  Make following directions fun with the Peekaboo Learning Farm.  Have your child follow directions, such as, "give me the chicken," "open the blue barn," or even  "take out the mouse and make him eat."
  2. Answering Yes/No questions:  Before having the ability to answer Wh- questions, your child must be able to answer yes/no questions regarding things they want, objects, and actions.  If your child is working on the concepts of yes and no, ask your child, "do you want the blue barn?" You could also make it a little silly to see if your child can answer yes/no questions regarding the function of the Peekaboo Learning Farm (Examples: should I eat the barn?  should I kiss the cow? should I open the barn?). Want another fun idea? Pair this toy with a farm themed book. Look at the animals on the pages of the book, and ask your child if they match the animals in the barns (i.e., "Is this a pig?").
  3. Answering Wh- questions: Work on who, what, where & why questions while playing.  Build comprehension by asking your child questions like "what is the mouse doing?," "who is in the red barn?," "where is the pig?," "why is the pig sleeping?" etc.
  4. Understanding spatial concepts (in/on/off/out):  Work on these early developing spatial concepts by having your child take the roof off the barn, putting the roof on the barn, taking the animals out of the barn, or putting the animal back in the barn.
  5. Building memory skills: Play a memory game!  Hide the animals in the different color barns, and see if your child can remember which animal is in which barn.  Then have your child hide them for you to guess!  

For expressive language development?

  1. Practice animal sounds:  Learning animal sounds is fun, plus animal sounds are often comprised of early developing sounds, making them easier for children to say!  Encourage your child to imitate you saying each animal sound. You can even try singing Old McDonald while opening up each barn. Be sure to pause at the end of the song, and wait for your child to fill in the blank (Example: here a moo, there a moo, everywhere a....)!
  2. Farm animal vocabulary:  Talk about the different farm animals in each barn, and see if your child can label them.  
  3. Requesting: Have your child request for the barns, animals or to open each barn.  Depending on how much expressive language they have, they could use a simple word such as, "open" or "more," or a phrase or sentence like, "I want open" or "Can I have the purple barn?"
  4. Commenting:  Encourage your child to comment throughout play.  Model appropriate comments while playing with your child.  Use language like, "I see a blue barn, what do you see?"
  5. Use of prepositional phrases: Place the animals in different locations and have your child use phrases to describe their locations.  Put them in the barn, out of the barn, on the roof, or behind the barn.
  6. Vocabulary of action words: Pretend that the animals are doing different things and ask your child what each animal is doing.  Depending on your child's vocabulary, you can focus on simple verbs like eat, sleep, and drink, or be more creative and use of verbs like swing, hop and slide.

For play development?

  1. Pretend play:  These barns provide so many pretend play opportunities.  Children can use their imaginations to pretend that the animals are eating, sleeping, playing, or even having a birthday party!  The possibilities are endless!

For social language development?

  1. Turn taking: Develop turn taking abilities by asking your child if you can have a turn opening the barns.   
  2. Asking questions:  Model appropriate questioning during play by asking your child questions like, "What barn do you think the cow is in?" or "What is your favorite color barn?"  Encourage them to ask you questions back!
READ MORE

Toys for Talking - At Home with Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog!

Learning Resource's Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog isn't just adorable, it's another great toy for facilitating both fine motor and speech and language development.  With this toy, children are encouraged to build counting, sorting and color identification skills. Another plus...this simple toy is quick to pick up, as the quills can be stowed away within the hedgehog's body and it can be easily wiped clean. 

What does Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog include?

  • 2 piece hedgehog
  • 12 peg shaped quills

How do you use Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog?

Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog has lost his quills!  Children can take turns putting the hedgehog's peg shaped quills into his back and then pulling them right back out.  In addition to all of the speech and language skills listed below, this toy can help children build:
  • Fine motor skills
  • Counting skills: Have your child practice counting each quills or placing them in numerical order.  There are numbers on each quill!
  • Sorting skills: Practice sorting the quills by color or make it even more complex by having your child sort them into warm vs. cool color categories

Where can I find Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog?

You can find it on Amazon HERE

How can you use Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog to encourage speech and language development?

For receptive language development:

  1. Following directions:  Build your child's ability to follow directions by telling them which quill to put in or take out (Examples: "put the red quill in!" or "take the purple quill out!").
  2. Understanding spatial concepts (in/on/off/out):  Work on these early developing spatial concepts by having your child take the quills out of the hedgehog, put the quills on the hedgehogs back and in the hedgehog's body.  You could have even more fun by pretending the hedgehog lost all of his quills and hide them around the house!  Have your child look for the quills and talk about where they found them (Examples: under the couch, in the sink, behind the bookshelf).
  3. Understanding quantitative concepts (all/none, more/less, most/least, one/all): Count the quills with your child and take turns placing the quills in the hedgehog's back with your child.  Talk about whether you or the hedgehog have most of the quills (or who has the least amount of quills.)
@my_sensorium

For expressive language development:

  1. Labeling colors:  This hedgehog's colorful quills are a perfect way to help your child learn their colors!  Label each color while your child is playing with the different colored quills. Bring in other toys that are the same colors as the quills and sort them so your child can generalize the color names to other items!  (*Side note-Children begin to recognize colors at around 18 months and continue to develop this skill through 2 years of age.  By three years of age, your child should be able to label at least one color).
  2. Requesting: Hold the quills so that your child must request in order to get one.  Whether they have a little bit of language or a lot of language, you can work on requesting in the following ways:
  • If your child's not yet talking: Ask your child "who want's it?" and have your child gesture place their hand on their chest to gesture for "Me!"  If they don't gesture independently, take their hand to help them perform the gesture and say "me." Children learn best through our models!
  • If your child only has a little bit of language: Encourage your child to use one word to request.  Have them use words like "me," "more" or even "quill" to ask you for each quill.
  • If your child has some phrases: Support your child's use of phrases to request by working on "I want" phrases.  First, model these phrases for your child by asking your child for the quills by saying, "I want quill" or "I want red."  Then encourage your child to do the same!
  • If your child is perfecting their language: Work on grammatically correct questions with your child.  Have your child ask for each quill by saying, "can I have a quill?" or "may I have the red quill?"

For play development:

  1. Functional use of objects:  Your child can practice demonstrating the functional use of objects, by putting the quills in and then taking them out.
  2. Pretend play:  Inspire your child to be creative in their play.  Pretend that the hedgehog has lost all of his quills in a forest.  Imagine that the hedgehog has found his way to a farm and needs the farm animals to help him get them back.  Don't be afraid to get silly!  

For social language development:

  1. Turn taking: Take turns putting the quills in Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog with your child.  Pause before it's your turn, and see if your child will tell you that it's your turn to put a quill in!
  2. Joint attention: Build joint attention while holding up the quills, putting the quills in or taking them out.  See if your child will look at you, look at the quill, and then back at you. This joint attention, or shared interest, is an important early milestone of language development.
  3. Asking questions:  Model appropriate questioning during play by asking your child questions like, "What color do you like?" or "Where do you think we should look for the quills?"  Encourage them to ask you questions back!
Toys for Talking - At Home with Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog! Learning Resource's Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog isn't just adorable, it's another great toy for facilitating both fine motor and speech and language development.  With this toy, children are encouraged to build counting, sorting and color identification skills. Another plus...this simple toy is quick to pick up, as the quills can be stowed away within the hedgehog's body and it can be easily wiped clean. 

What does Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog include?

  • 2 piece hedgehog
  • 12 peg shaped quills

How do you use Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog?

Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog has lost his quills!  Children can take turns putting the hedgehog's peg shaped quills into his back and then pulling them right back out.  In addition to all of the speech and language skills listed below, this toy can help children build:
  • Fine motor skills
  • Counting skills: Have your child practice counting each quills or placing them in numerical order.  There are numbers on each quill!
  • Sorting skills: Practice sorting the quills by color or make it even more complex by having your child sort them into warm vs. cool color categories

Where can I find Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog?

You can find it on Amazon HERE

How can you use Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog to encourage speech and language development?

For receptive language development:

  1. Following directions:  Build your child's ability to follow directions by telling them which quill to put in or take out (Examples: "put the red quill in!" or "take the purple quill out!").
  2. Understanding spatial concepts (in/on/off/out):  Work on these early developing spatial concepts by having your child take the quills out of the hedgehog, put the quills on the hedgehogs back and in the hedgehog's body.  You could have even more fun by pretending the hedgehog lost all of his quills and hide them around the house!  Have your child look for the quills and talk about where they found them (Examples: under the couch, in the sink, behind the bookshelf).
  3. Understanding quantitative concepts (all/none, more/less, most/least, one/all): Count the quills with your child and take turns placing the quills in the hedgehog's back with your child.  Talk about whether you or the hedgehog have most of the quills (or who has the least amount of quills.)
@my_sensorium

For expressive language development:

  1. Labeling colors:  This hedgehog's colorful quills are a perfect way to help your child learn their colors!  Label each color while your child is playing with the different colored quills. Bring in other toys that are the same colors as the quills and sort them so your child can generalize the color names to other items!  (*Side note-Children begin to recognize colors at around 18 months and continue to develop this skill through 2 years of age.  By three years of age, your child should be able to label at least one color).
  2. Requesting: Hold the quills so that your child must request in order to get one.  Whether they have a little bit of language or a lot of language, you can work on requesting in the following ways:
  • If your child's not yet talking: Ask your child "who want's it?" and have your child gesture place their hand on their chest to gesture for "Me!"  If they don't gesture independently, take their hand to help them perform the gesture and say "me." Children learn best through our models!
  • If your child only has a little bit of language: Encourage your child to use one word to request.  Have them use words like "me," "more" or even "quill" to ask you for each quill.
  • If your child has some phrases: Support your child's use of phrases to request by working on "I want" phrases.  First, model these phrases for your child by asking your child for the quills by saying, "I want quill" or "I want red."  Then encourage your child to do the same!
  • If your child is perfecting their language: Work on grammatically correct questions with your child.  Have your child ask for each quill by saying, "can I have a quill?" or "may I have the red quill?"

For play development:

  1. Functional use of objects:  Your child can practice demonstrating the functional use of objects, by putting the quills in and then taking them out.
  2. Pretend play:  Inspire your child to be creative in their play.  Pretend that the hedgehog has lost all of his quills in a forest.  Imagine that the hedgehog has found his way to a farm and needs the farm animals to help him get them back.  Don't be afraid to get silly!  

For social language development:

  1. Turn taking: Take turns putting the quills in Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog with your child.  Pause before it's your turn, and see if your child will tell you that it's your turn to put a quill in!
  2. Joint attention: Build joint attention while holding up the quills, putting the quills in or taking them out.  See if your child will look at you, look at the quill, and then back at you. This joint attention, or shared interest, is an important early milestone of language development.
  3. Asking questions:  Model appropriate questioning during play by asking your child questions like, "What color do you like?" or "Where do you think we should look for the quills?"  Encourage them to ask you questions back!
READ MORE
Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots!

Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots!

“Be Careful! Scissors are DANGEROUS!” or something along those lines is what parents usually shout when they see their little ones holding scissors in their hands. While I don’t disagree with the statement by any means, I want to share all of the ways scissor skills are so important for development, as well as all of the fun ways we can incorporate underlying scissor skills into everyday play…even for the youngest of our learners!
 
Using scissors efficiently requires a lot of motor planning, coordination, and dexterity.  Before a student can successfully use scissors, there are many underlying skills that can be worked on and strengthened so that we can set up the student for optimal success.  There are so many ways that we can interact and play with our kiddo’s to help develop the many different motor control areas!
Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Shape

Grasp/Release:

Activities that promote opening and closing of the hands and fingers such as using tongs, tweezers, clips, squeezing, etc.

Two-handed Coordination:

Activities that promote the use of both hands together such as tearing paper and peeling and sticking stickers.

Hand and Finger Strengthening:

Dough, putty, tweezers, tongs, spray bottles, stress ball squeezes, etc.

Visual Skills:

Activities that promote active and intentional use of the visual system such as eye-spy, hidden pictures, following targets with eyes (rolling a ball and following eyes, marble tower, etc)
 
When introducing scissors for the first time, spring loaded scissors are extremely helpful and can ease the introduction.  The spring mechanism will “bounce” back the blades to reduce the amount of strength and coordination required, therefore, allowing kiddos who do not quite have the strength or coordination to still be able to cut!  The best part is that once they outgrow the spring, you can “turn it off” and use them as normal scissors.
 
Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Pink Stencil
 
As a School-Based Occupational Therapy Assistant (COTA/L), we are often checking out the progression of scissor use in kiddo’s and here is a general milestone timeline that we use as reference.Starting at/around:

25-26 months

We like to see kiddos snipping with scissors in one place

37-38 months

Cut a piece of paper in half

41-42 months

Cut out a 5” line within ½” of the target

49-50 months

Cut a 3” circle within ¼” of the target for 3/4th of the circle

53-54 months

Cut out a 3” square within ¼” of the line
Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Fine Motor  Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Cutting Purple LineWhile development isn’t always linear, we often see a general progression as outlined and the underlying skills are very important in achieving these skills.
 
Here are some fun tips and hacks to help your little ones practice their scissor skills:

 

  • Start with “snipping”. practicing small snips will help promote practice, as well as success! We want our kiddo’s to feel like they are successfully cutting and expecting them to open/close and move forward can be tricky at first.
  • Using a more restrictive paper such as cardstock or thicker paper can help with control (much easier to hold the paper steady than flimsy paper or thin material). You can also steady the paper for them to reduce the amount of work and coordination.
  • Along with restrictive paper, you can also use restrictive materials such as dough, putty, straws, paper plates, index cards, etc.
  • Teaching “thumbs up” when holding the scissors by placing a small sticker or Washi tape to remind them which side is up – tell them to make sure they can see their sticker.
  • When teaching the forward motion aspect, make it fun! Pretend like the scissors are alligators, trains, cars, etc and have them cut across a path or road.
Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Supplies  Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots SkillsTrace Ace Scissors has been a great addition to my therapy toolbox.  With my little preschool students, we had fun learning to use a stencil.  Mini crayons help reinforce proper pencil grasp as they color, stencils help incorporate the use of the two hands together, and we used cardstock paper so that it would provide more resistance and help stabilize the paper as they cut with the spring loaded scissors.Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Materials 2  Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Materials

Save it for later!

Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots!
“Be Careful! Scissors are DANGEROUS!” or something along those lines is what parents usually shout when they see their little ones holding scissors in their hands. While I don’t disagree with the statement by any means, I want to share all of the ways scissor skills are so important for development, as well as all of the fun ways we can incorporate underlying scissor skills into everyday play…even for the youngest of our learners!
 
Using scissors efficiently requires a lot of motor planning, coordination, and dexterity.  Before a student can successfully use scissors, there are many underlying skills that can be worked on and strengthened so that we can set up the student for optimal success.  There are so many ways that we can interact and play with our kiddo’s to help develop the many different motor control areas!
Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Shape

Grasp/Release:

Activities that promote opening and closing of the hands and fingers such as using tongs, tweezers, clips, squeezing, etc.

Two-handed Coordination:

Activities that promote the use of both hands together such as tearing paper and peeling and sticking stickers.

Hand and Finger Strengthening:

Dough, putty, tweezers, tongs, spray bottles, stress ball squeezes, etc.

Visual Skills:

Activities that promote active and intentional use of the visual system such as eye-spy, hidden pictures, following targets with eyes (rolling a ball and following eyes, marble tower, etc)
 
When introducing scissors for the first time, spring loaded scissors are extremely helpful and can ease the introduction.  The spring mechanism will “bounce” back the blades to reduce the amount of strength and coordination required, therefore, allowing kiddos who do not quite have the strength or coordination to still be able to cut!  The best part is that once they outgrow the spring, you can “turn it off” and use them as normal scissors.
 
Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Pink Stencil
 
As a School-Based Occupational Therapy Assistant (COTA/L), we are often checking out the progression of scissor use in kiddo’s and here is a general milestone timeline that we use as reference.Starting at/around:

25-26 months

We like to see kiddos snipping with scissors in one place

37-38 months

Cut a piece of paper in half

41-42 months

Cut out a 5” line within ½” of the target

49-50 months

Cut a 3” circle within ¼” of the target for 3/4th of the circle

53-54 months

Cut out a 3” square within ¼” of the line
Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Fine Motor  Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Cutting Purple LineWhile development isn’t always linear, we often see a general progression as outlined and the underlying skills are very important in achieving these skills.
 
Here are some fun tips and hacks to help your little ones practice their scissor skills:

 

  • Start with “snipping”. practicing small snips will help promote practice, as well as success! We want our kiddo’s to feel like they are successfully cutting and expecting them to open/close and move forward can be tricky at first.
  • Using a more restrictive paper such as cardstock or thicker paper can help with control (much easier to hold the paper steady than flimsy paper or thin material). You can also steady the paper for them to reduce the amount of work and coordination.
  • Along with restrictive paper, you can also use restrictive materials such as dough, putty, straws, paper plates, index cards, etc.
  • Teaching “thumbs up” when holding the scissors by placing a small sticker or Washi tape to remind them which side is up – tell them to make sure they can see their sticker.
  • When teaching the forward motion aspect, make it fun! Pretend like the scissors are alligators, trains, cars, etc and have them cut across a path or road.
Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Supplies  Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots SkillsTrace Ace Scissors has been a great addition to my therapy toolbox.  With my little preschool students, we had fun learning to use a stencil.  Mini crayons help reinforce proper pencil grasp as they color, stencils help incorporate the use of the two hands together, and we used cardstock paper so that it would provide more resistance and help stabilize the paper as they cut with the spring loaded scissors.Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Materials 2  Scissor Skills for Tiny Tots Materials

Save it for later!

READ MORE

DIY Fall Sensory Bin!

Fall is here! Which means I get to put together one of my most favorite sensory bins of the year.  Who can resist the smell of apple cinnamon and pine cones mixed with the texture of corn kernels, right!?

Every year I try to add in components that align with the developmental stage my daughter is in.  Being almost 3, she is refining her fine and visual motor skills every day, so we added in lots of fine motor challenges and visual perceptual options this year. Toddlers also seek independence in everything they do, so sensory bins are always a great task to get them involved when putting it together.

Fall Sensory Play 4

Sensory Bin Materials

First, we gathered all of our goodies.  For this bin, we are using corn kernels, play apples, pine cones, flat marbles, and play leaves as our main “ingredients”.  You can control the amount of scent you include in your bin by sprinkling apple pie spice, or adding cinnamon sticks.  My daughter does not have any aversions to scent, so we went with pre-scented apples and pine cones (you can often find these in the fall section of your local craft store!).

Fall Sensory Play 7

Next, I had her scoop and pour the corn kernels into her bin, and add in all of the goodies.  I let her play for a while and explore the different scents and textures.  She loves to explore using kitchen utensils (spoons, bowls, funnels, cups, etc) – she made our whole family some apple soup with a side of leaves and pine cones for dinner!  All of this is working on their imagination skills which is fantastic for this age.

Then, the fun begins for me! Here are some fun challenges I incorporated into our purposeful play!

Fine Motor

Corn kernels are awesome because when a toddler plays with it, they are naturally practicing their pincer skills just picking them up and moving them around!  I also love to incorporate various tongs, tweezers, and clothespins for her to use while she picks up apples or “catches” leaves.

Fall Sensory Play 8

Visual Motor

Sorting tasks are always a big hit.  I had her sort out red apples, green apples, yellow leaves, and green leaves.  You can also work on patterning or visual model copying.  For my daughter, I lined up a couple objects (red apple, green leaf, pine cone) and had her find the matching objects in the bin and line them up in the same order.

Fall Sensory Play 5Fall Sensory Play 6

Stereognosis

This is a high-level perceptual skill that I love to throw in when planning activities.  Stereognosis is the ability to perceive an object from touch – sensory bins are perfect for this because you can hide a pine cone underneath the corn kernels, have them dig in, and see if they can find the pine cone only by touch. I can’t tell you how intrinsically motivating and fun this is for them, all while working on some amazing developmental skills.

Fall Sensory Play 3

The thing I really love about sensory bins is that they are easily adaptable to any age group.  If your little one is younger, try adding the corn kernels to a clear bottle with some leaves and pom poms and have them roll it all around.  Watch them in awe as they see the goodies move all around inside the bottle and hear the sounds of the kernels as they slide!

 

Save it for later!

 

DIY Fall Sensory Bin!

Fall is here! Which means I get to put together one of my most favorite sensory bins of the year.  Who can resist the smell of apple cinnamon and pine cones mixed with the texture of corn kernels, right!?

Every year I try to add in components that align with the developmental stage my daughter is in.  Being almost 3, she is refining her fine and visual motor skills every day, so we added in lots of fine motor challenges and visual perceptual options this year. Toddlers also seek independence in everything they do, so sensory bins are always a great task to get them involved when putting it together.

Fall Sensory Play 4

Sensory Bin Materials

First, we gathered all of our goodies.  For this bin, we are using corn kernels, play apples, pine cones, flat marbles, and play leaves as our main “ingredients”.  You can control the amount of scent you include in your bin by sprinkling apple pie spice, or adding cinnamon sticks.  My daughter does not have any aversions to scent, so we went with pre-scented apples and pine cones (you can often find these in the fall section of your local craft store!).

Fall Sensory Play 7

Next, I had her scoop and pour the corn kernels into her bin, and add in all of the goodies.  I let her play for a while and explore the different scents and textures.  She loves to explore using kitchen utensils (spoons, bowls, funnels, cups, etc) – she made our whole family some apple soup with a side of leaves and pine cones for dinner!  All of this is working on their imagination skills which is fantastic for this age.

Then, the fun begins for me! Here are some fun challenges I incorporated into our purposeful play!

Fine Motor

Corn kernels are awesome because when a toddler plays with it, they are naturally practicing their pincer skills just picking them up and moving them around!  I also love to incorporate various tongs, tweezers, and clothespins for her to use while she picks up apples or “catches” leaves.

Fall Sensory Play 8

Visual Motor

Sorting tasks are always a big hit.  I had her sort out red apples, green apples, yellow leaves, and green leaves.  You can also work on patterning or visual model copying.  For my daughter, I lined up a couple objects (red apple, green leaf, pine cone) and had her find the matching objects in the bin and line them up in the same order.

Fall Sensory Play 5Fall Sensory Play 6

Stereognosis

This is a high-level perceptual skill that I love to throw in when planning activities.  Stereognosis is the ability to perceive an object from touch – sensory bins are perfect for this because you can hide a pine cone underneath the corn kernels, have them dig in, and see if they can find the pine cone only by touch. I can’t tell you how intrinsically motivating and fun this is for them, all while working on some amazing developmental skills.

Fall Sensory Play 3

The thing I really love about sensory bins is that they are easily adaptable to any age group.  If your little one is younger, try adding the corn kernels to a clear bottle with some leaves and pom poms and have them roll it all around.  Watch them in awe as they see the goodies move all around inside the bottle and hear the sounds of the kernels as they slide!

 

Save it for later!

 

READ MORE
1-2-3 The Floor is Lava!
READ MORE
5 Fun Ways to Celebrate Oktoberfest for Kids
READ MORE
DIY Space Sensory Bin!
It’s simple to make your own space sensory bin using dried black beans and a few items you probably already have in your home or classroom.
READ MORE