Posted in children, Education, Parents and education

The Importance of Messy and Sensory Play for Babies and Toddlers

The following article is written by Cerine from The Baby Scoop. Cerine is a mum and a montessori trained teacher with many years of experience working with babies and toddlers. Cerine and the baby scoop team run messy and sensory play classes for babies and toddler in London. Website: https://www.thebabyscoop.co.uk/ and instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thebaby__scoop/

Messy and sensory play are extremely hands-on sensory activities, which are open-ended and stimulate all of the senses including touch, smell, taste, sound and sight. These are all vital for your child’s learning and development in their early years.

The more babies and toddlers engage in messy and sensory play, the more they will benefit from the following:

Brain Development and Cognitive Growth

Sensory play forms strong neural pathways in the brain and allows for multiple connections to take place, meaning a baby makes sense of the world around them through this type of play.

Increase Sensory Awareness and Decreases Sensitivity to Texture

The more they are exposed to different textures and materials, the more they will become aware of their senses which decreases sensitivity. This helps with fussy eaters!

Language Development

They learn new words to describe how different textures feel and what actions they can do with them. Their language skills develop through communicating with others while playing.

Fine and Gross Motor Skills

They have endless opportunities to practise and master their physical skills through pouring, scooping, transferring, picking up with tweezers, strengthening their wrist control and improving their hand-eye coordination. Their balance, spatial awareness and body control is also developed through sensory play.

Problem Solving

By experimenting with different objects and materials, they develop problem solving skills and decision making through trial and error. 

Social interactions

Improves social skills by playing cooperatively and collaboratively with others. 

Adaptability

Encourages a positive attitude to trying new things and to adapt to new situations.

Sparks Imagination and Creativity

The open-ended nature of messy and sensory play means that there is no right or wrong way to engage which allows for children’s imagination and creativity to flow.

Comfort

Sensory play is very therapeutic for children and can have soothing and calming effects on children when they are feeling anxious or unhappy.

Here are a few examples of some messy and sensory play activities that are taste safe for babies and toddlers and that are easy to do at home.

  1. Cloud dough

Ingredients: 2.5 cups flour and ¼ cup oil

Texture: mouldable sand that holds its shape and crumbles like sand

Ways to play: Colour it using powder paint or powder food colouring (or natural colouring like cocoa) to give it a theme (ocean, soil etc), add scoops, cups, shape moulds etc.

  1. Cornflour goop (oobleck)

Ingredients: 2 cups cornflour and 1 cup water

Texture: this non-Newtonian fluid is both a liquid and a solid!

Ways to play: Add a drops of food colouring for different themes and enjoy being able to squeeze this texture into a solid and releasing it back into a liquid. Add a colander, scraper, wooden spoons.

  1. Chia seeds

Ingredients: ¼ cup chia seeds and 1 ¾ cups water, food colouring (soak overnight)

Texture: the chia seeds have a very gooey and wet texture

Ways to play: Turn this into a pond for frogs or a swamp for dinosaurs and provide your child with spoons, ice cube trays, scoopers and small world figurines.

  1. Coloured dry rice (or lentils, pasta, chickpeas, oats etc)

Ingredients: 1 cup dry rice to 1 tbsp water and few drops of food colouring (mix in a bag or container and let dry on a tray) 

Texture: Dry rice is a great introductory sensory base for babies to explore a new texture

Ways to play: turn this into a garden and add flowers, plant pots, lolly sticks, muffin trays, cupcake cases, cups and bowls, scoopers, funnels etc.

  1. Citrus water play

Ingredients: Water, citrus fruits or flowers, food colouring (optional) 

Texture: Water play with a twist! The scent of the citrus fruits and flowers awaken the sense of smell.

Ways to play: add funnels, bowls, cups of different sizes, tongs, slotted spoons and sieves.

Messy and sensory play is extremely beneficial for young children from when they are babies and provides them with experiences and skills that they will use throughout their life.

Posted in Education, Parents and education

Our Playroom

Ever since we decided to build and move to a new house, I planned for a playroom for my kids. Our house didn’t have a spare room for a playroom, so we decided to turn our garage into one. Believe it or not, it’s our favourite room in the house. I added carpet, storage shelves and boxes, decluttered toys, added an adjustable table that can be suitable for both studying and activities or arts and crafts.

Reading Corner

Our reading corner is my absolute favourite! I always get a lot of questions about these shelves. Unfortunately, I do not remember where I got them. They are actually three separate columns and You put them vertically. I decided to move them to the playroom and flip them horizontally and stack them on top of each other. A few Dr. Seuss quotes ( my favourite author) and a rainbow for that special touch.

Storage Tubs

These lovely storage tubs and shelves are from http://www.ikea.com I added vinyl labels and sorted them accordingly:

1- Stationary 2- Playdough 3- Flashcards 4- Pegs/sticks 5- Literacy 6- Paint 7- Tutoring 8- Recyclables 9- Miscellaneous . I believe that organising all our stuff and labeling them helped keep our playroom tidy. This will also help your child know where to place back everything they took out.

The activity table is also from http://www.ikea.com I love this table because it is also adjustable. The size is also perfect and spacious.

Storage tubs for stationary
Rack to hang art work and reminders
My Office space

I placed my desk in the kids’ playroom and this is the best idea ever! This worked perfectly because I can get some work done and the kid will be busy playing or doing some learning at the same time. My office is still incomplete need to add a few shelves and some final touches. 🙂

Storage baskets also from Ikea: Puzzles, Lego and blocks, wooden toys, Animals

I placed the most frequently played with toys in these baskets.

A teepee where Luna likes to spend her time playing with her dolls or reading a book.

I love the storage boxes I got for Kareem’s toys. I got it from ebay.

The white and green toy box is from Ikea, it’s where I keep toys they don’t play with much but don’t want to get rid of.

That’s a tour of our playroom! Thank you for reading. If you have any questions please comment below.

Posted in Parenting, Parents and education

Stop Crying mum, It’s just Kindergarten!

“Stop Crying Mum, it’s just Kindergarten!” 😭
This has been the most emotional month of my life! But I keep reminding myself that I need to pull myself together! I know for sure I will be teary, but now is not the time to show just how sad I am about my little one heading to big kid school.
A tip I read was:

✅Get them excited about all of the new friends they are going to make and the fun they’ll have on the playground.
✅ You might want to cry when you drop them off and go for it – once they’ve walked into their classroom and can’t see you. Until that moment, make sure you have a big smiley face on and reassure them that you’ll be back – like you always are.
How was your little one’s first day of school?