Monday, April 2, 2012

Sensory Play

The sensory table is almost always busy in our classroom.  It's a very important part of a preschoolers day.  We try to vary activities so that all children are drawn here.  For children that don't like to get their hands messy, there are things like sand, rice, beans or bird seed.  For those that relish the mess, there's jello, shaving cream, and different doughs.  At the sensory table children are able to experiment, refine small motor skills necessary for writing, develop hand eye coordination, cooperate, observe and discover.  Sensory play is also a very calming, relaxing experience for many children.  We use both the sensory table and smaller containers that are usually limited to one child at a time.  Here's a look at our recent sensory activities.

Water Beads


Water beads are traditionally used to keep house plants moist.  They are very small until water is added.  They slowly absorb water until they grow to about the size of a marble.  



The children added them to water in the sensory table.



After lunch, they had grown to this size.



The children enjoyed scooping, squishing and exploring them for a few days.


Gingerbread "Dough"


One morning the children wanted to make something new in the sensory table so we dug through the cupboards until we came up with gingerbread mix, oil, flour and water.  They dumped and mixed with their hands.



We decided it still needed something so we added lots of sprinkles.  What isn't better with sprinkles??



They scooped, sifted, packed and made ice cream cones for the entire morning!




Jello


We recently made Jello for the sensory table and added a potato masher, some scoops, bowls, measuring cups and a mesh produce basket.



The kids loved this activity!  Unfortunately, the Jello only lasted a day but we will do it again soon!


Water



Currently, the kids are playing with water, bobbers, plastic fish, fish nets and pails.  The table stays busy all day!



Bird seed with bugs, magnifying glasses and bug boxes and catchers.


Individual Sensory Boxes


Colored pom poms, plastic tiles and textured balls with sorting cups and tweezers.



Wooden beads and thimbles with lacing string and pipe cleaners.



Colored popcorn seed with a scoop, small pitcher and different containers.



Colored rice with small containers and scoops, people, animals, fence pieces and trees.


1 comment:

  1. It is great to have some photos that help explain all of the things that Madelyn talks about, I think this is a great idea and hope that it will be updated often.

    ReplyDelete