Skip to main content

100+ Sensory Table Ideas for Your Preschooler

100+ Sensory Table IdeasAs a preschool teacher, I’m always looking for ways to spice things up in my classroom, including new and fun sensory table ideas.  Thankfully, an amazing coworker created a master list many moons ago, and shared it with me as I was starting out.

Whether you’re a preschool teacher, or a parent of a preschooler, you’ll appreciate the diversity of a good sensory table.  Sensory tables provide an opportunity for preschoolers to experience a wide array of fine motor skills, as well as some gross motor skills, all a sensory-rich environment.  Don’t have a full-blown sensory table for your home or your classroom?  Remember, water/sand tables make great sensory tables, too!

Also, the sensory table ideas listed below can be mixed and matched for whole new levels of experience.  Toss in tools to assist in manipulating the items in the table, such as cups and measuring spoons for pouring, tongs/kid-friendly tweezers, and scissors for snipping and cutting.  Also, you’ll notice, most of these items can be found for free or cheap.  There are some items worth making an intentional purchase, but most of this can be found around your home, or collected over the course of a few weeks or months, or as a collective effort by classroom parents.

Obviously, teachers need to use their best judgement as to what is appropriate/safe in their own classroom, and supervision is key in a classroom setting, as well as at home.

 

100+ Sensory Table Ideas for Your Preschooler

  1. water
  2. jello
  3. pudding
  4. ice
  5. packing peanuts or other styrofoam
  6. shredded paper
  7. pumpkin guts
  8. rice
  9. coffee grounds
  10. dirt
  11. corn meal
  12. sea shells
  13. seeds
  14. dry pasta
  15. cooked pasta
  16. fresh, crinkly leaves
  17. “clean mud” (see recipe below)
  18. rocks of all sizes and shapes, but clean first with rubbign alcohol
  19. flour
  20. pieces of paper to rip
  21. corn: right off the ears or cooked
  22. easter grass
  23. snow
  24. shaving cream
  25. whipped cream
  26. feathers
  27. yogurt
  28. nuts
  29. cotton balls
  30. straws
  31. old bows from Christmas presents
  32. empty egg cartons: cleaned, and cut up to different sizes; use with pom-poms, small rocks, or other small objects, as well as tongs, spoons, etc
  33. salt
  34. dry instant mashed potatoes: use plain (dry) or add a little water for a different effect
  35. oatmeal
  36. pop corn: popped, or plain kernels
  37. baby shampoo
  38. bubbles
  39. pom poms
  40. the holes from a hole-puncher
  41. pine cones
  42. flax
  43. sawdust
  44. buried treasure!
  45. cereal, just about any kind
  46. baking soda
  47. supersand (equal parts cornmeal and coffee grounds)
  48. marbles
  49. flower petals
  50. hay
  51. sugar
  52. play dough
  53. slippery slime
  54. flubber: pour Elmers glue in with a little cornstarch until it becomes “blubbery”
  55. buttons
  56. cedar shavings
  57. sticks and twigs
  58. grass clippings
  59. jelly beans
  60. milk
  61. juice
  62. honey
  63. ice cream
  64. whole bananas for squishing!
  65. marshmallows
  66. broccoli
  67. crackers
  68. cookies
  69. tomatoes
  70. salsa
  71. bread crumbs
  72. pieces of bread
  73. small balls
  74. beads
  75. puzzle pieces, all different sizes
  76. confetti
  77. scarves
  78. fabric samples, all different sizes and textures
  79. seaweed
  80. blocks
  81. LEGOs
  82. coins (clean with rubbing alcohol first)
  83. popsicle sticks
  84. cottage cheese
  85. egg shells (clean with rubbing alcohol first)
  86. blueberries
  87. hair gel
  88. cut-up pool noodles
  89. pipe cleaners
  90. ribbon
  91. yarn
  92. sponges: various sizes, shapes, colors
  93. Ziploc baggies with various materials (water, paint, hair gel) inside the bin for a cleaner, and different experience
  94. plastic easter eggs
  95. candy corn
  96. acorns
  97. aquarium rocks
  98. toilet paper and paper towels rolls
  99. lids
  100. clothespins
  101. bells of different sizes
  102. photos
  103. the insides of cassette tapes
  104. plastic or rubber animals
  105. water beads

**Let me reiterate the importance of supervising children with these items, and teaching them how to properly play at the sensory table.  This is equally important both at home and at school.**

Got any other ideas or suggestions for the sensory table?   Share them here in a comment!



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ditching the Sponge

Ditching the Sponge This summer I accomplished something I once thought unthinkable: I gave up the sponge.  It was a gripping addiction, harder to kick than a nasty nicotine habit.   ...a habit that had the ability to spar k the silliest of arguments amongst even the best of   roomies.  Right, SwimBikeMom ?  :P  But once again, I digress; that's a blog for another day. Perhaps a tad  OCD, I was one of *those* people who had a sponge designated for various parts of the kitchen: one for the floor, one for the counters, and another one for dishes.  I knew for quite some time that sponges were a breeding ground for all things disgusting; however, I was not keen on the idea of using paper towels, or other disposable products -- I had  to find a GREEN alternative to sponges.

(Shhh.... Sneaky) Sloppy Joes

Want to bulk up a simple classic with some veggies?  Try my Sneaky Sloppy Joes. Sauté some onions, garlic (two staples I put in just about any skillet dish), finely diced squash, finely chopped spinach.  You can also add finely diced carrots, bell peppers of assorted colors, brocolli, and whatever else you can sneak in to the pan!  I do all this before browning the ground turkey.  Then, prepare as you normally would, whether your sloppy joe sauce is canned, enveloped, or made-from-scratch (c'mon!). I've been packing mine with extra veggies for over a year, and no one is none the wiser.  Yet. (Please don't show this to my family...  please?) This recipe is also posted under my Big Oven account.  :o)

Unit Price, Unit Price, Unit Price!!!

I have discovered that many people do not take unit price in to account when attempting to shop savvily.  (Did I just make up a new word?!!)  So for my fellow frugal shoppers, or my frugal-shoppers-in-training, let me explain the value in knowing the unit price of an item you wish to purchase, or are pondering purchasing. What the heck is a unit price??