Vestibular
Movement Sense: Vestibular input (the sense of movement, centered in the inner ear) can be obtained by spinning and swinging, and to a lesser extent, any type of movement.
Toddlers and Preschoolers
Swing on playground swings, trying various types of swings and movements, such as front and back and side to side. Spin on a Sit n' Spin, Dizzy Disc Jr., or office chair. Run in circles, ride a carousel, hold your child's arm and legs and spin him around like an airplane.
School age kids
Hang upside down from the monkey bars, roll down a grassy or snowy hill (good proprioceptive input as well), ride a roller coaster, use swings.
Teenagers and Adults
Swing on a hammock, use playground swings or merry-go-round (you're never too old!), do cartwheels and dance .
Other Movement Activities
Jumping over hurdles Jump rope Trampoline
Tunnels Curb/line walking Jump Rope
Obstacle Course Hopscotch Hokey Pokey
Animal walks/hops Swings Mummy walks
Twister Dribble Ball bounce-catch tennis ball
Proprioception
Joint and Muscle sense: Proprioceptive input (sensations from joints, muscles and connective tissues that lead to body awareness) can be obtained by lifting, pushing, and pulling heavy objects as well as by engaging in activities that compress (push together) or distract (pull apart) the joints like playing tug-of-war.
Toddlers and Preschoolers
Make a "sandwich" by firmly pressing on your child's arms legs and back with pillows or make a "burrito" by rolling her up in a blanket. She can push her own stroller, and a stronger child can push a stroller or cart filled with weighted objects such as groceries. Your child can wear a backpack or fanny pack filled with toys (not too heavy!).
Schoolage kids
Jump on a mini-trampoline, play hopscotch, vacuum, carry books from one room to another, help wash windows or a tabletop.
Teenagers and Adults
Shovel snow, rake leaves, push heavy objects like firewood in a wheelbarrow, do push-ups against the wall, wear a heavy backpack or pull it on a luggage cart, mow the lawn with a push mower, wear a weighted vest available from a sporting goods store that sells equipment for martial arts or weightlifting training.
Other Heavy Work Activities
Monkey bars Tug of War Hands only wrestling
Carry basket full of stuff Push ups Body (no hands) wrestling
Wheelbarrow walk Crab walk Weighted back pack (<5% body wt)
Color on wall/under table Sit Ups Wall push-ups
Shred paper/cardboard Stack chairs Crumple newspaper
Sandwich between cushions Roll in a blanket Roll ball over body
Weighted vests Compression vest
Tactile
Sense of touch: Tactile input is the sense of touch and includes texture, temperature, pressure, and more. Don't forget that the tactile system includes not only the skin covering your body but also inner skin linings such as inside the mouth.
Toddlers and Preschoolers
Let her drink plain seltzer or carbonated mineral water to experience bubbles in her mouth (you can flavor with lemon, lime, etc.). Play with foamy soap or shaving cream, add sand for extra texture, use fingerpaint, play with glitter glue, mix cookie dough and cake batter, and so on. Let your child use the playground sandbox or create your own at home, filling a bin with dry beans and rice or other materials. Use clay such as Play-Doh (the classic Play-Doh Fun Factory provides excellent proprioceptive input as well). Don't force a child who is unwilling to touch all these "yucky" substances. Let her use a paintbrush, stick, or even a toy for cautious exploration.
Schoolage kids
Eat frozen foods (popsicles, frozen fruit or vegetables), dress up in fun costumes to get used to the feel of unfamiliar clothing, garden and repot indoor plants, play with make-up and face painting.
Teenagers and Adults
Sculpt, sew, weave, crochet or knit, create a scrapbook (lots of pasting and working with different textures), use sandpaper to smooth a woodworking project, take a very cold or hot shower or bath.
Other Touch Activities
Finger paints Bare feet walking Hand/finger puppets
Sand box Water Play Hidden objects in a bag
Hand Fidgets
Nerf balls silly putty floam/gak
Auditory
Sense of hearing: Auditory input is what we hear and is anatomically connected with the vestibular sense. In addition to listening to various types of music, both recorded and live, here are some ways to get calming and organizing auditory input.
· Get out in nature and listen. Go to the beach or sit still and listen to a thunderstorm or windstorm. If you hear birds singing, try to identify what direction a given bird is calling from.
· Listen to natural sounds recordings such as a rainstorm, waves crashing against the beach, or birds in the forest. Sometimes natural sound recordings also feature light instrumentation with flutes, keyboards, etc.
· Play a listening game: you and your child sit very quietly and try to identify the sounds you hear (traffic, the hum of the refrigerator, a door shutting, etc.).
· Encourage your child to play a musical instrument. For a child with auditory sensitivity, controlling the sounds she hears can be especially helpful. If your child is fearful of loud noises, let him control the volume on the stereo, exploring soft vs. loud music.
· Get a white noise machine, tabletop rocks-and-water fountain, or aquarium.
Visual
Sense of Sight: If your child is visually distractible, simplify the visual field in his home or school environment for a calming effect. Alternately, if your child seems visually "tuned out," i.e., does not seem to respond easily to visual stimulation, add brightly colored objects to attract visual attention. For example, a child who has trouble getting aroused for play may be attracted by a brightly painted toy chest filled with appealing colored toys.
· Hide clutter in bins or boxes or behind curtains or doors—a simple, solid-color curtain hung over a bookshelf instantly reduces visual clutter.
· Use solid colored rugs instead of patterned ones and solid-colored walls (for example, avoid patterned wallpaper).
· Have your child sit at the front of a classroom where there is less visual distraction. He may also need to sit away from the window to avoid the distraction of the outdoors. Keep in mind, however, that some children do best sitting in the back of the room so they can monitor what other kids are doing without constantly turning around. Work with the teacher to see which seating arrangement works best for your child.
· Avoid toys, clothes, towels, etc., in colors that your child find stress-inducing such as bright orange, yellow, and red (your child may have a different "hated" color.)
Smell If your child has sensory problems, certain odors can stimulate, calm, or send him into sensory overload.
· Explore scents with your child to find the ones that work best to meet your goal (either to calm or to wake up). While everyone has different preferences, lavender, vanilla, and rose are generally calming. Peppermint and lemon are usually invigorating. Let's say your child needs help staying calm and loves lavender. You can use lavender soaps and bath oils to ease bath time, lavender candles or oils in an aromatherapy burner or machine at bedtime, and lavender body lotion.
· If your child is overtired at the mall and you know scents help, have her smell her favorite scent or stop into a strongly-smelling store that sells candles and soaps.
· Play a smelling game with your SI child. Have her close her eyes or wear a blindfold and try to identify smells such as maple syrup, apple, peanut butter, and soap.
· Life stinks sometimes. Accept your child's opinion about something she thinks smells "gross." Then help her find something that smells nice.
Taste
Gustatory or Sense or taste: Taste input is strongly influenced by smell (as an experiment, chew some gum until the flavor is gone, then hold a lemon under your nose; the gum will taste like lemon).
· Strong tastes can stimulate the mouth and make him more willing to try new foods. Before presenting new foods, let the child have one peppermint, sour gummy bear, or other strong-flavored food.
· If your child does not have a strong negative reaction to refined sugar (becomes very "hyper" or gets very sleepy), get an assortment of flavored jellybeans. Eat one at a time, and have her guess which flavor it is.
· Children will be more likely to taste something if they help make it. Let him help you select foods. For example, let him choose between chicken or fish, string beans or sugar snaps, and potato or rice. Then let your child arrange the meat in the baking pan, break off vegetable tips and dump in water, and so on. Let him help you arrange food on each plate into a pleasing presentation.
· Don't forget to play with your food. A so-called picky eater may be more willing to eat "rocks and trees" than meatballs and broccoli.
Oral Fidgets
Drink tiny/big straws Blow with straws Blow bubbles
Tongue depressors tiny licorice sour patch kids
Crunchy items – pretzels
Some basics
ACTIVITIES TO RAISE ALERTNESS LEVEL
ORAL/FACE ACTIVITIES:
HAND ACTIVITIES:
BODY ACTIVITIES:
ACTIVITIES TO HELP ORGANIZE SELF OR TO PROMOTE SELF CALMING
ORAL/FACEACTIVITIES:
HAND ACTIVITIES:
BODY ACTIVITIES:
Disclaimer: Davis School District Related Services (DSD RS) makes no claims, promises, warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained in or linked to this website. The information contained in this website is provided to users for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. The transmission or receipt of such information is not intended to create a relationship between any DSD RS provider and the user or browser. Although it is the goal of DSD RS to provide quality information, DSD RS expressly disclaims all liability to any person who, upon reliance on the information provided in this website, takes or fails to take any particular action.
Movement Sense: Vestibular input (the sense of movement, centered in the inner ear) can be obtained by spinning and swinging, and to a lesser extent, any type of movement.
Toddlers and Preschoolers
Swing on playground swings, trying various types of swings and movements, such as front and back and side to side. Spin on a Sit n' Spin, Dizzy Disc Jr., or office chair. Run in circles, ride a carousel, hold your child's arm and legs and spin him around like an airplane.
School age kids
Hang upside down from the monkey bars, roll down a grassy or snowy hill (good proprioceptive input as well), ride a roller coaster, use swings.
Teenagers and Adults
Swing on a hammock, use playground swings or merry-go-round (you're never too old!), do cartwheels and dance .
Other Movement Activities
Jumping over hurdles Jump rope Trampoline
Tunnels Curb/line walking Jump Rope
Obstacle Course Hopscotch Hokey Pokey
Animal walks/hops Swings Mummy walks
Twister Dribble Ball bounce-catch tennis ball
Proprioception
Joint and Muscle sense: Proprioceptive input (sensations from joints, muscles and connective tissues that lead to body awareness) can be obtained by lifting, pushing, and pulling heavy objects as well as by engaging in activities that compress (push together) or distract (pull apart) the joints like playing tug-of-war.
Toddlers and Preschoolers
Make a "sandwich" by firmly pressing on your child's arms legs and back with pillows or make a "burrito" by rolling her up in a blanket. She can push her own stroller, and a stronger child can push a stroller or cart filled with weighted objects such as groceries. Your child can wear a backpack or fanny pack filled with toys (not too heavy!).
Schoolage kids
Jump on a mini-trampoline, play hopscotch, vacuum, carry books from one room to another, help wash windows or a tabletop.
Teenagers and Adults
Shovel snow, rake leaves, push heavy objects like firewood in a wheelbarrow, do push-ups against the wall, wear a heavy backpack or pull it on a luggage cart, mow the lawn with a push mower, wear a weighted vest available from a sporting goods store that sells equipment for martial arts or weightlifting training.
Other Heavy Work Activities
Monkey bars Tug of War Hands only wrestling
Carry basket full of stuff Push ups Body (no hands) wrestling
Wheelbarrow walk Crab walk Weighted back pack (<5% body wt)
Color on wall/under table Sit Ups Wall push-ups
Shred paper/cardboard Stack chairs Crumple newspaper
Sandwich between cushions Roll in a blanket Roll ball over body
Weighted vests Compression vest
Tactile
Sense of touch: Tactile input is the sense of touch and includes texture, temperature, pressure, and more. Don't forget that the tactile system includes not only the skin covering your body but also inner skin linings such as inside the mouth.
Toddlers and Preschoolers
Let her drink plain seltzer or carbonated mineral water to experience bubbles in her mouth (you can flavor with lemon, lime, etc.). Play with foamy soap or shaving cream, add sand for extra texture, use fingerpaint, play with glitter glue, mix cookie dough and cake batter, and so on. Let your child use the playground sandbox or create your own at home, filling a bin with dry beans and rice or other materials. Use clay such as Play-Doh (the classic Play-Doh Fun Factory provides excellent proprioceptive input as well). Don't force a child who is unwilling to touch all these "yucky" substances. Let her use a paintbrush, stick, or even a toy for cautious exploration.
Schoolage kids
Eat frozen foods (popsicles, frozen fruit or vegetables), dress up in fun costumes to get used to the feel of unfamiliar clothing, garden and repot indoor plants, play with make-up and face painting.
Teenagers and Adults
Sculpt, sew, weave, crochet or knit, create a scrapbook (lots of pasting and working with different textures), use sandpaper to smooth a woodworking project, take a very cold or hot shower or bath.
Other Touch Activities
Finger paints Bare feet walking Hand/finger puppets
Sand box Water Play Hidden objects in a bag
Hand Fidgets
Nerf balls silly putty floam/gak
Auditory
Sense of hearing: Auditory input is what we hear and is anatomically connected with the vestibular sense. In addition to listening to various types of music, both recorded and live, here are some ways to get calming and organizing auditory input.
· Get out in nature and listen. Go to the beach or sit still and listen to a thunderstorm or windstorm. If you hear birds singing, try to identify what direction a given bird is calling from.
· Listen to natural sounds recordings such as a rainstorm, waves crashing against the beach, or birds in the forest. Sometimes natural sound recordings also feature light instrumentation with flutes, keyboards, etc.
· Play a listening game: you and your child sit very quietly and try to identify the sounds you hear (traffic, the hum of the refrigerator, a door shutting, etc.).
· Encourage your child to play a musical instrument. For a child with auditory sensitivity, controlling the sounds she hears can be especially helpful. If your child is fearful of loud noises, let him control the volume on the stereo, exploring soft vs. loud music.
· Get a white noise machine, tabletop rocks-and-water fountain, or aquarium.
Visual
Sense of Sight: If your child is visually distractible, simplify the visual field in his home or school environment for a calming effect. Alternately, if your child seems visually "tuned out," i.e., does not seem to respond easily to visual stimulation, add brightly colored objects to attract visual attention. For example, a child who has trouble getting aroused for play may be attracted by a brightly painted toy chest filled with appealing colored toys.
· Hide clutter in bins or boxes or behind curtains or doors—a simple, solid-color curtain hung over a bookshelf instantly reduces visual clutter.
· Use solid colored rugs instead of patterned ones and solid-colored walls (for example, avoid patterned wallpaper).
· Have your child sit at the front of a classroom where there is less visual distraction. He may also need to sit away from the window to avoid the distraction of the outdoors. Keep in mind, however, that some children do best sitting in the back of the room so they can monitor what other kids are doing without constantly turning around. Work with the teacher to see which seating arrangement works best for your child.
· Avoid toys, clothes, towels, etc., in colors that your child find stress-inducing such as bright orange, yellow, and red (your child may have a different "hated" color.)
Smell If your child has sensory problems, certain odors can stimulate, calm, or send him into sensory overload.
· Explore scents with your child to find the ones that work best to meet your goal (either to calm or to wake up). While everyone has different preferences, lavender, vanilla, and rose are generally calming. Peppermint and lemon are usually invigorating. Let's say your child needs help staying calm and loves lavender. You can use lavender soaps and bath oils to ease bath time, lavender candles or oils in an aromatherapy burner or machine at bedtime, and lavender body lotion.
· If your child is overtired at the mall and you know scents help, have her smell her favorite scent or stop into a strongly-smelling store that sells candles and soaps.
· Play a smelling game with your SI child. Have her close her eyes or wear a blindfold and try to identify smells such as maple syrup, apple, peanut butter, and soap.
· Life stinks sometimes. Accept your child's opinion about something she thinks smells "gross." Then help her find something that smells nice.
Taste
Gustatory or Sense or taste: Taste input is strongly influenced by smell (as an experiment, chew some gum until the flavor is gone, then hold a lemon under your nose; the gum will taste like lemon).
· Strong tastes can stimulate the mouth and make him more willing to try new foods. Before presenting new foods, let the child have one peppermint, sour gummy bear, or other strong-flavored food.
· If your child does not have a strong negative reaction to refined sugar (becomes very "hyper" or gets very sleepy), get an assortment of flavored jellybeans. Eat one at a time, and have her guess which flavor it is.
· Children will be more likely to taste something if they help make it. Let him help you select foods. For example, let him choose between chicken or fish, string beans or sugar snaps, and potato or rice. Then let your child arrange the meat in the baking pan, break off vegetable tips and dump in water, and so on. Let him help you arrange food on each plate into a pleasing presentation.
· Don't forget to play with your food. A so-called picky eater may be more willing to eat "rocks and trees" than meatballs and broccoli.
Oral Fidgets
Drink tiny/big straws Blow with straws Blow bubbles
Tongue depressors tiny licorice sour patch kids
Crunchy items – pretzels
Some basics
ACTIVITIES TO RAISE ALERTNESS LEVEL
ORAL/FACE ACTIVITIES:
- vibrator- to cheeks, jaw, or in mouth (do not do neck),
- toothettes,
- “red hots” candy
- blow bubbles,
- smells—cinnamon,
- smelly markers,
- use a variety of colors on paper, change colors frequently—have student change the marker/colored pencil after 2-3 answers,
- feathers to tickle
HAND ACTIVITIES:
- koosh balls, morph balls,
- remove rubber band around palm,
- find objects in rice,
- dribble a ball,
- sticky wicks,
BODY ACTIVITIES:
- jumping—on mini trampoline,
- moon shoes,
- rocking/banana chair,
- light tickles,
- wheelbarrow walks,
- wall push ups,
- jump over hurdles,
- obstacle course,
- jump rope,
- tin can stilts, swings,
- walk bare footed
- hands only wrestling,
- body only wrestling,
ACTIVITIES TO HELP ORGANIZE SELF OR TO PROMOTE SELF CALMING
ORAL/FACEACTIVITIES:
- chew gummy bears or other chewy foods,
- suck a heavy milkshake,
- drink through a tiny straw,
- head phones with instrumental music,
- smells—banana/vanilla,
- vibration to jaw or in mouth
HAND ACTIVITIES:
- lotion,
- finger paints,
- crumple newspaper,
BODY ACTIVITIES:
- tug of war, monkey bars, deep pressure (Dots & Stripes)
- “heavy hands” on shoulders
- weighted back pack(<5% total body weight),
- wheelbarrow walk,
- shred newspaper,
- stack chairs,
- push-ups, on floor or wall
- carry a basket full of stuff,
- sit crossed legged on the floor
Disclaimer: Davis School District Related Services (DSD RS) makes no claims, promises, warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained in or linked to this website. The information contained in this website is provided to users for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. The transmission or receipt of such information is not intended to create a relationship between any DSD RS provider and the user or browser. Although it is the goal of DSD RS to provide quality information, DSD RS expressly disclaims all liability to any person who, upon reliance on the information provided in this website, takes or fails to take any particular action.