How to Support Sensory Development and Engagement In Babies and Young Children - WE C Hope (2024)

Saturday June 23, 2018

Jocelyn Leworthy, RECE, CIMI explores the role our senses play in daily life and development from our earliest days, and how we can encourage fun sensory stimulation to nourish young lives.

How to Support Sensory Development and Engagement In Babies and Young Children - WE C Hope (1)

Think about your experience in the world – I expect you can easily appreciate how your senses of sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell play a vital role in your day-to-day life.

Without even thinking about it, we use our senses to process information and make decisions, from deciding when it is safe to cross a busy street by visually scanning the intersection and listening for cars, to being drawn into an impulsive snack by the enticing smell, visual appearance, and anticipated great taste of freshly baked goods while out shopping. We also use our senses to connect with and relate to others, from demonstrating presence using eye contact and active listening, to offering a hug to share love or comfort.

As often as you rely on your senses, so do babies and young children. Even before birth, the senses have already started to develop. Touch is one of the first senses to develop in the womb, and babies are born with an acute ability to distinguish sounds at birth, as they were able to pick up on sound waves through the womb. During gestation, the sense of taste also begins to develop, but does not typically mature until about 2 years of age (Infant Massage WINC, 2017).

For little ones, early sensory experiences play a vital role in brain development. Through exposure to new experiences, objects, and interactions, infants also gain information, learn about, and make sense of the world around them. For example, by talking to your child and verbally naming objects or things that you or your child is doing, you’re teaching them vocabulary and that language has purpose. Providing your child with a toy that lights up or makes noise helps them to learn concepts like cause and effect. When your child touches an activating button, they learn that the object lights up or makes a certain noise.

As a parent, there is a vast array of ways you can support your child’s development and engage them through sensory experiences. An endless range of toys offer sensory stimulations, but there are also many simple things you can do during routine interactions with your child, and fun activities to engage the senses using materials from around your home. Below are some basic tips for each of the five senses.

Touch

How to Support Sensory Development and Engagement In Babies and Young Children - WE C Hope (2)Touch is one of the first senses developed before birth. There are so many ways you can further engage this sense as your child develops. In addition to holding your child for comfort, you can incorporate infant massage into your daily routine, like after changing your child or after bath time. Massage exposes your child to nurturing touch that has many healing and developmental benefits. It also allows your child to gain body awareness, and experience different sensations depending on the part of the body being touched.

You may also engage your child’s sense of touch by offering them safe materials to manipulate, like textured toys/blocks or items that allow them to push, pull, squeeze etc.

Hearing

How to Support Sensory Development and Engagement In Babies and Young Children - WE C Hope (3)To encourage engagement of your child’s sense of hearing, create opportunities to sing, read, or talk to your baby. Babies typically prefer high pitched voices and by 6 months you will notice that they will start to imitate some sounds you make (Infant Massage WINC, 2017). These opportunities can occur anytime, from labeling your interactions as you play or walk with your infant, to singing as you change or bathe them.

The choice of song is not about what you sing or how well you do it, but more about the interaction and exposing your baby to different rhythms. Alternatively, you may wish to play different types of music for your child. You can also offer your child opportunities to explore with musical instruments.

When reading to your child, you can also experiment using different tones and volumes when representing different characters in the story. You can also expose your child to sounds in new environments.

Smell

Infants are able to recognize their mother’s scent within a few days of birth, so it is often comforting for babies to have access to an item or article of clothing that smells like mom when she is not present. When parents are present, cuddling and touching baby are simple ways to pass on their scent.

To further engage the sense of smell, you can introduce your baby to new people and new environments. As you expose your child to new foods, they may also learn to distinguish between different scents. Some families also engage the sense of smell by use of diffusion scents like lavender.

How to Support Sensory Development and Engagement In Babies and Young Children - WE C Hope (4)

Sight

After birth, infants can typically see approximately 8-10 inches in front of them, and it is often noted that they prefer high contrast objects, and faces (Infant Massage WINC, 2017). To engage the sense of sight, offer your baby items to track visually that are within close proximity, such as mobiles. This also means your closeness is important. Develop a great habit of making eye contact when talking to your baby.

In addition, engage their sense of sight by offering books and toys that are black/white or high contrast. As your baby gets older you can play games of peek-a-boo, or hiding a toy under a blanket to encourage them to seek it out.

Taste

How to Support Sensory Development and Engagement In Babies and Young Children - WE C Hope (5)As you’ve likely already noticed, babies are known to put almost everything in their mouth! This is a very normal way they explore things in their environment. Engage your child’s sense of taste by offering toys or objects that are safe to put in the mouth (no small or sharp pieces).

As your child gets older, you may introduce new flavors and textures at mealtimes. Be patient in this process as it can take time for a young child to adjust to new foods.

Stimulating Multiple Senses Together

Although the above activities are separated as they relate to each of the senses, it’s important to remember that almost everything your baby is exposed to will incorporate many, if not all of the senses. For example, by taking your child to a new place, like a park, you can expose them to new scenery, sounds, smells, and sensations.

Reading to your baby usually involves you holding your baby, which offers them touch and exposure to your scent. You might also engage their sense of touch by encouraging them to feel the book – some books offer different textures specifically for this purpose. Reading of the book exposes them to sound/s you make as you talk, and showing them pictures/making eye contact with your child encourages their visual engagement.

Similarly, infant massage is known to be a very positive multi-sensory engaging experience for babies and young children. When offering massage, in addition to stroking different parts of the body, parents are encouraged to sing/talk to their baby and make eye contact with them. Through use of non-scented oils, babies are also able to pick up on their parent’s scent.

Engaging the Senses Aids Development

How to Support Sensory Development and Engagement In Babies and Young Children - WE C Hope (6)As children grow, they also acquire more complex skills through sensory experiences. For example, when playing with sensory materials like water, play dough, blocks; sand etc., they begin to develop fine motor skills – use of the small muscles in the hands. This is achieved through molding, manipulating, stacking, grasping, pouring etc.

Children learn about concepts like cause and effect when their play involves complete actions like pouring, mixing, stacking and moving. They also learn about physical properties (shape/size/colour/texture), and conservation. Through exploring with the materials, they also develop foundation skills for math and science, including measurement, observing physical changes when materials are mixed or altered, and making comparisons. Sensory experiences also promote imaginative play and encourage social development like turn taking, sharing, and perspective taking when other children are involved.

A Final Word

In summary, the senses play a critical role in a child’s holistic development, and their ability to make sense of the world around them. As a parent or caregiver, there are endless opportunities to engage the senses through fun, stimulating interactions and experiences. Take time to try some new approaches today.

Reference

WINC Infant Massage. (2017). WINC Certified Infant Massage Instructor Manual.

How to Support Sensory Development and Engagement In Babies and Young Children - WE C Hope (2024)

FAQs

How to Support Sensory Development and Engagement In Babies and Young Children - WE C Hope? ›

Sight and Sound

The magic of color through art activities, light tables, and brightly illustrated books can help bring a variety of experiences to children. To help children develop their sense of hearing, educators can bring read aloud books to life with various character voices and nuances through storytelling.

How to promote children's sensory development? ›

Sight and Sound

The magic of color through art activities, light tables, and brightly illustrated books can help bring a variety of experiences to children. To help children develop their sense of hearing, educators can bring read aloud books to life with various character voices and nuances through storytelling.

What can you do to support infants and young children's development? ›

Read and speak with the children in your care.

To support the rapid language and cognitive development of infants and toddlers, caregivers need to speak and read to children. The number of words young children hear is predictive of their own vocabulary and language skills later on.

How can we support children with sensory processing needs? ›

Provide a sensory space where the child can access their sensory needs. Plan a sensory timetable / diet so the child has regular opportunities for the sensory input they require. Provide sensory resources to meet the individual needs and interests of the child. Provide 'choices' of sensory activities for the child.

What is sensory development in child development? ›

Sensory development relates to our senses (vision, hearing, touch, taste, smell) which allow us to explore the world around us.

How to support the learning and development of infants and toddlers? ›

Talk, Read and Sing Together Every Day!

A language-rich environment is important to children's early brain development, and can have strong effects on early language, vocabulary, reading, and math skills, as well as on children's social-emotional development.

How do you support young children's learning and development? ›

Key points: Warm, trusting relationships with knowledgeable adults support children's learning more effectively than any amount of resources. Follow the child's lead to the meeting of minds. Tuning in, observing and wondering come first.

How can you best support a child's growth and development? ›

The more you chat, play and read with young children, the more you help develop their brain, and provide them with the skills they need for when they start school.

What are examples of how do you provide sensory stimulation? ›

Offer group experiences and outings to cater for individual tastes and interests. Games, quizzes, craft groups, gardening or pottery groups, outings, concerts, exercise programs, cooking, food tasting, sing-alongs, religious services and spiritual events can give sensory stimulation.

How do you engage an infant? ›

Gently clap your baby's hands together or stretch arms (crossed, out wide, or overhead). Gently move your baby's legs as if pedaling a bicycle. Use a favorite toy for your baby to focus on and follow, or shake a rattle for your infant to find. Make different facial expressions for your baby to imitate.

How can I make my baby sensory? ›

Encourage baby to crawl over, under, and through various objects in your home. Introduce baby to new textures through food, toys, clothes, sponges, etc. Provide plenty of skin-to-skin contact with caregivers. Keep baby away from areas where people are smoking or using harsh chemicals.

What is provided by activities that require infants to use their senses? ›

Overall, the benefits of sensory activities for early childhood development are well-established. Sensory play also supports language acquisition, cognitive development and problem-solving, social interaction and emotional skills, and both fine and gross motor skill development.

How do senses develop in infancy? ›

Babies are able to follow or track an object in the first few weeks. Focus improves over the first 2 to 3 years of life to a normal 20/20 vision. Newborns can detect light and dark but cannot see all colors. This is why many baby books and infant stimulation toys have distinct black and white patterns.

How can I prevent my baby from having sensory issues? ›

The best way to protect babies from sensory overload is to become an expert interpreter of his or her cues, and then you can begin to find the balance between what the baby can handle, and what and how much stimulation is enough to encourage learning.

References

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