Sensory bags are a cheap and fun way to engage the senses and develop language skills.

How to Make a Sensory Bag

Build functional language skills.

Ask the sensory explorer to tell you or show you what you might do with the item and where you might find it.

(If the sensory explorer is unsure, model what to do with the item and see if they can copy your action.)

Allow the sensory explorer time to explore the item and process the information then shake the bag again for them to select another item.

Keep language simple.

Focus on phrases such as ‘Choose’ or ‘Take one’ when presenting the bag to the sensory explorer.

Focus on the name of the object e.g ‘starfish’, ‘sponge‘, ‘hat’ and two-word phrases e.g. ‘little shell’, ‘red sunglasses’.

Depending on the ability of the sensory explorer you may choose to add verbs such as ‘dig’, ‘eat’, ‘swim’ etc

 

Seaside Themed Sensory Bag

Place items you may take to the beach or find at the beach into the bag e.g. bottle of sunscreen, sunglasses, sunhat, sand toys, starfish, seashells, sponge, seaweed, pebbles small container of sand (or sandpaper.)

 

Weather Themed Sensory Bag

Place weather related items into the bag, a torch (to represent the sun), a fan (to represent the wind), a water spray bottle (to represent the rain), a Joss Stick or piece of net to represent fog.

Extend the learning further by adding a hat, gloves, folded umbrella, a wellington boot and a hand warmer. Can the sensory explorer match the clothing to the weather?

 

India Themed Sensory Bag

Add items related to India into the bag. Sari or sparkly material, mirror, bangles, rice, spices e.g. turmeric, cardamom, cinnamon, poppadoms, water in a squirty bottle to represent a monsoon, a heat bag or torch to represent the sun.

Explore sounds. Play sound effects e.g. a snake hissing, a lion roaring, Indian languages, Indian music, the Indian national anthem, a busy Indian market etc (there are many free audio clips online)

 

Three Little Pigs Sensory Bag

Add items related to the story: twigs, straw, cinnamon/bread sticks, lego or duplo brick, plastic teeth or fur to represent the wolf, a fan (to re-enact the wolf blowing)

Extend learning. Can the sensory explorer retell the story using the props?

For more ideas, inspiration and FREE resources visit the website

 

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