What is Sensory Play?

Tuesday, 22 January 2013 09:52 by Nursery Value

what is sensory play

What is Sensory Play?

Sensory Play is a fairy new and exciting part of child development, allowing children to learn through experience.

The theory is that, whilst your child may be learning to talk, and their first words could happen at any time, all their senses have been developing constantly since birth.

These senses can be stimulated, and bonds built between child and parent, without the need for verbal communication. 

Your child may have developed a question, and have no way of communicating it verbally. Sensory play encourages your child to scratch, sniff, lick, grab, stare, rub etc. Investigating, using their senses, and answering the question themselves. 

Sensory play is also used to develop the neurological pathways associated with each sense. Motor skills also get a boost, as children manipulate whatever material or tools they have been given. Creative, Dramatic skills come in to play, as children use their imagination to find new ways to use these materials and tools.

Ideas for Sensory Play

The best way to control Sensory Play is to make sure all activity happens within a designated space. Use a plastic tray or box, and even introduce a lid to signal when playtime has started and finished.

ideas for sensroy play

Sticky - Take some left-over white bread and add your child's choice of food colouring. Green for example. Then pour on four dollops of PVA glue. This makes a sticky (and cheap) alternative to playdough, that will stimulate the smells and touch senses.

Shaving Foam - Mix straight from the can with food colouring to make bright and vibrant bath-paints. Just make it clear that you are in charge of the can and that no foam goes in their mouths.

Mud - Again, using a tray, set up a mud bath kitchen in the garden. This allows for sensory play with Mud with a quarter of the mess!

jelly alphabet

Jelly - Make a batch of jelly. Whatever flavour, it doesn't matter as this is for playing with and not eating. If it can fill your play tray even better. Encourage your child to mix into the slimy jelly some alphabet magnets from the fridge. This will combine the idea of touch, colours and shapes. 

Sand box - A classic. Introduce any of your child's toys you don't mind getting a little mucky to introduce the concept of sand with something more familiar.

Touchy Feely Runway - Lay down a number of different, flat surfaces on the floor and secure if needed. These could include a cork board, some bubble wrap, cling film or a place mat from the table. Allow your child to walk, roll or craw along the runway and experience each texture.

Do you have your own sensory play ideas? Let us know in the comments, via twitter or facebook.

Shyloh - the Early Days

Monday, 23 April 2012 10:16 by Natasha
As I look at my little bundle of joy sweetly sleeping, its amazing to think that six months have gone by so quickly.  It seems only yesterday that I was slowly going insane with the stress of being a first time mum.  It's not quite a bed of roses now, but it has got so much easier as the months have gone on, and I think that's down to knowing Shyloh better.  In truth, we both know each other better, it took us a while but I no longer want to tear my hair out, and she no longer wants to torture me with days of sleep deprivation.  I do however fully intend to get my own back when she's a teenager by whipping the duvet off her at 7am on a weekend, declaring that she's wasting away the day in bed (cue maniacal laugh... mwahahahaha!).
 
The first month was a heady mixture of being ecstatic, pumped full of adrenaline, to crying my eyes out and wanting sleep more than I have ever wanted sleep in my whole life.  In the first five days I managed a grand total of ten hours sleep - I felt like I'd been drugged, it was all very surreal and disorientating.  But no matter how awful I felt, all I had to do was look at her staring up at me and the hours of tears (from us both), all seemed worth while.  
 
The worst thing, looking back, was not knowing what she wanted... being first time parents, some of it came from instinct, but the rest was a guessing game.  Thom's favourite phrase was, 'why is she crying?' (it used to drive me mental, as I must have misplaced my baby translator at the hospital).  And with the added bonus of having a reflux baby, we had even more to enjoy, such as trips to a&e at 2am, projectile vomiting that would put Regan from the Exorcist to shame, and diarrhoea/constipation combos from unsuccessful medication.   
 
Another thing that was fantastic was people's opinions and advice on how to raise our baby.  Perfect strangers would suggest the most ludicrous things, everyone from the cashier at Tesco to the old lady down the road who last had children in 1910 was an expert in Shyloh.  Ok, some of it was helpful, but I decided to draw the line when my mum grabbed my boob and shoved it in Shy's mouth as I was, 'feeding her wrong'.  At the end of the day, this was my baby, and no one was going to know what to do better than me (unless they were of course there 24/7 to witness my daughter, the demon child, do her thing).  Yes, it's been a massive learning curve, and I've read more baby books than Gina Ford has had Mum of the Year Awards, but I feel like I got there eventually.  Just about.  
 
I would say that one of the best things I've done with Shyloh so far is breastfeeding.  So much so that I will probably write a whole other blog on it!  It had it's ups and downs but the rewards have far outweighed the tears and frustration.  And there are so many other things that have made our first six months magical - her first smile, first gurgle, first time she rolled over, first time I thought someone had stolen Shyloh in the night as I'd slept nine hours without interruption.  First swim, first laugh, first non-exploding poop.  I could go on.  Basically, she's awesome and I have loved every single moment of our lives together.  Yey for Shyloh! 

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Shyloh's coming - our big day

Thursday, 8 March 2012 12:45 by Natasha

I'm going to tell you all about my labour now... and I think at this point 98% of you will probably stop reading.  But for those of you with strong stomachs and balls of steel, here it is.  God knows why I'm actually telling you this, and I really hope it doesn't put you off having children of your own someday, but I think I'm also doing it to try and make sense of everything that happened in what felt like 16 hours of madness.  Trust me, I've asked Thom and he can't quite put it to words either.  

I'd been to the hospital for the 58th time with reduced movements.  Ok, it wasn't actually the 58th time, but it felt like it - when it's your first pregnancy you're not really sure what to expect, but they'd told me to keep and eye on the little one's jiggling so here I was again.  Turned out it was a good job I had gone; the fluid around her had reduced drastically, so they said I needed to be induced.  That was my whole birthing plan out the window - I had intended to do it all in the birthing centre, with low lighting, me in the pool relaxed, transcending to another plain of inner calm, Thom in the corner singing Kum Ba Yah while our darling angel entered this world... but no.  I wasn't best pleased, but the only thing on my mind was ensuring she was safe and well.  

Thom lovingly brought me a curry for my last meal as a non-parent and I was the envy of the ward.  I would have happily shared it with the midwife if she could have got Shyloh out that night as I was sick of waiting and getting impatient, but there were a load of other women also there to be induced.  The woman next to me said she was having to wait until Friday (it was now Tuesday), so I wasn't holding my breath, but after nine months of puking, diarrhoea and looking like a whale I just wanted to meet my baby. 

The next morning I was sent down to be induced, and I can honestly say it was the most painful thing I have ever experienced (sorry to those who have got this coming) and was then told the contractions you feel when induced are far more painful than if it were to occur naturally, as your body is being thrust into labour.  Great.  They started coming an hour after induction, starting from a scale of 'ooooh that was uncomfortable' increasing to 'get the sodding doctor in here noooooooooooooowwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww!!!!' (think the girl from the Exorcist and you've pretty much got the picture).  I was left like that for SEVEN hours, and it was the longest seven hours of my life - not even a paracetamol to ease the pain (they wouldn't give me one!), and was even told not to use my TENS machine yet, as I couldn't possibly be in labour.  It wasn't until a very anxious Thom rushed for a doctor before I went on a mental rampage through the hospital to find one, that he came in, took one look and said 'oh yes, she's definitely in labour!'.  

I was then moved into my labour room and after that my memory starts to get a little patchy... I think I remember pretty much all of it, but then bits come back, like flashbacks of a freaky dream had the night before.  I wont tell you everything, I don't want to bore you by telling you how, once high on gas and air, I spent the next two hours going 'I loooovvveee this song' to every song that came on my ipod, grinning insanely like a tipsy Cheshire Cat and telling Thom I loved him every five seconds.  And, lets face it, I also don't want to scare the hell out of you either.  I feel like everything went wrong - the woman who put the drip into my hand somehow managed to make the needle go in one part and come out the other (it looked pretty horrific, and I think Thom was about to chunder) then had the audacity to ask if she could break my waters!  Thom relishes in telling me they looked like knitting needles, but I stop him from divulging further.  The guy who put in my epidural managed to hit a nerve which was excruciating and had to be removed and done again (try being told not to move when you're having contractions every few minutes!).  Shyloh kept on wriggling and they couldn't locate her heartbeat, so I had to have an internal monitor put in (don't ask).  I basically had a million wires coming out of me.  Thom, in the meantime, had fallen asleep on a beanbag on the floor... bless, it must have been so exhausting for him (that's sarcasm by the way!).  

I couldn't tell you how much time had passed, but I did know I'd been doing this for a very long time (I gauged this by the volume of drool coming from Thom's mouth as he slept!).  I was keen to see it through and get her out as naturally as possible, especially as my labour was now differing so much from my original plan, but soon, the doctors came rushing in as her heart rate had dropped - that was pretty scary.  They had to do a procedure where they went in and took blood from her head to test the oxygen levels (they didn't take enough and had to do it again - told you everything went wrong!).  They then let me carry on, but it quickly dropped again, and it was at this point they informed me that they would have to perform an emergency c section.  I didn't care any more, all I wanted was for Shy to be safe and well.  

I can't remember much of being moved and prepped for surgery, I just remember lights, lots of people around, being numbed up to my arms (very weird sensation).  I do however remember feeling very nervous - not because of the c section, but because this was it, I was finally going to meet my daughter.  From the moment of being taking into surgery it only took them four minutes to get her out; I still find this pretty incredible that they can work so quickly, but they made me feel like I was in safe hands.  I heard her cry and that was it, I was in tears, Thom was in tears.  It was by far the best moment of my life.  I can't possibly explain what it felt like to see her the first time (I'm even welling up as I write this) as the only emotion that I can describe from that moment was an overwhelming, unconditional love.  She from that second became everything to me.  Although she looked like a miniature version of Phil Mitchell I thought she was the most beautiful thing in the world.  

Reading back I realise that a lot of the labour sounds like a horror story, and believe me, I've given you the 12 rated theatrical version (not the 18 rated directors cut with all the gory bits left in!).  But one thing I can say is that I would do it a million times over; Shyloh was unequivocally worth it.   And yes, I would go through it all again for another, but much to Thom's dismay, we are NOT having enough for a five-a-side game!