Handling online learning with your child during a pandemic could be challenging at times, especially if your child needs out of the classroom services. Moving from in-person therapy sessions to at-home therapy sessions may be a rough transition. Occupational therapists are trying to figure out the best way to help your children reach their goals as well as staying safe and healthy. One solution that can help you and your family is teletherapy!

What is Teletherapy?

Teletherapy allows for the technology world and therapy world to come together. Technology allows therapists to work with their children through the screen of a computer. Occupational therapists are a part of the move to make teletherapy more common. During the pandemic, it is more commonly known for therapists to be working with their clients through teletherapy with a variety of both physical and mental health conditions.

For more information on teletherapy, click here!

Occupational therapists can use teletherapy to help their patients achieve the same goals during their online sessions as if they were in-person sessions. Teletherapy uses several interventions to help your child achieve their goals with the following:

The OT Toolbox shares more information on understanding teletherapy.

Here are the best tips to help with teletherapy:

If you want more helpful tips for teletherapy, click here!

How Online Learning works with Occupational Therapy?

Online learning is broken down into four categories based on occupational therapy done in school. These categories are broken down into:

Presence Learning shares more on online learning here!

Platforms to use for Teletherapy

Occupational therapists are using social platforms to use for teletherapy. All of these platforms have been approved and are easy to use.

10 Teletherapy Games Your Child Will Love

To keep your child interested with therapy while being online and offline, here are some fun games you can play with them any time during the day!Teletherapy Online Games

Mr. Potato Head Online: This game is great to work on spatial awareness, but your child doesn’t get the chance to work on their fine motor skills. http://mrpotatohead.play.scriptmania.com/mrspotatohead/?fbclid=IwAR0LUES0MCL7m3MxPvt_jYV_u1I6xDNgVyFdpVrOsOBytymVI4rgxBThFa4

Nick Jr. Games: This website is great for children to work on their visual perceptual skills. http://www.nickjr.com

Jeopardy Labs: This game is great for the family! You and your kids can make your own Jeopardy boards while working on your child’s handwriting skills! https://www.growinglittlebrains.com/blog/fun-ot-teletherapy-games

ABCya!: This is a fun educational website with games that go by subjects and themes. https://www.abcya.com

Toy Theater: This website is great for older kids to help with executive functioning. https://toytheater.com 

THERAPY OFF-LINE GAMES

6. Cards

7. Simon Says

8. Rock, paper, scissor

9. Tic tac toe

10. Scavenger Hunt

Check out for more fun games here! https://www.theottoolbox.com/teletherapy-activities-for-occupational-therapy/

It absolutely is! To develop and learn, children need a stimulating environment and lots of opportunities for play. At an early age, kids learn about the world around them by using their senses: touching, smelling, tasting, seeing, and hearing. The best learning environment is one where a child feels safe and encouraged to use their senses and explore their environment.

Sensory play represents a child’s ability to engage their senses as they play and it is recognized as one of the most important educational tools from a very early age. Sensory play includes a variety of activities that stimulate any or all of a child’s senses, helping them explore and use those senses.

The experience of exploring the world through sensory play is fundamental for a child’s development. Art and sensory play promote creativity and imagination, boost curiosity, problem-solving, hand-eye coordination, and fine motor skills. Sensory play enhances a child’s social-emotional skills, supports language development, and lifts self-esteem.


Why is Sensory Play Important for Children with Developmental Disabilities?

Children with developmental disabilities often experience difficulties in exploring the world around them with their five senses. They may have a hard time making sense of different sensations they experience with their senses and may need extra support to learn through senses.

Sensory play is important for kids with special needs because it has many benefits. It helps kids understand how their bodies work and teaches them how to process information from their environment.

Taste sensory play helps kids with developmental disabilities recognize different kinds of food, but it also helps them associate food with fun and pleasure. Sight play teaches children about colors and encourages them to experiment with light. Through touch play, kids learn to explore the world with their hands, and so on.

Sensory Play Encourages Fine Motor Development

Fine motor skills involve the coordination of small muscles of hands and fingers with the eyes. Although these movements seem so natural and effortless, fine motor skills are complex skills that involve synchronized efforts of the brain and muscles.

Different art and sensory activities require a child to hold and manipulate a variety of objects, materials, textures, and shapes. Holding and manipulating items such as pencils, brushes, squeeze bottles, crayons, pipe cleaners, Play-Dough, pom poms, beads, straws, stickers, and other small objects promote small muscles development and encourage eye-hand coordination.

Fine motor skills ensure that a child masters a variety of skills from getting dressed to writing their own name. These skills improve brain functions and encourage overall development.

Sensory Play Boosts Brain and Cognitive Development

Brain development in early childhood is rapid and radical and amazingly progresses in the first five years of life. More than a million neural connections (synapses) are created in every second of this early-stage development. In other words, the brain is most flexible to learning during the first few years of life.


Sensory play improves brain plasticity and flexibility, helping grow and strengthen connections in the brain’s pathways. Brain plasticity and flexibility are essential for the child’s ability to complete more complex tasks, cognitive and language development, and gross motor skills.

Sensory activities can help develop memory, enhance a child’s problem-solving skills, and teaches kids sensory attributes such as dry, cold, warm, sticky, wet, smooth, bumpy, etc.

Also, sensory play sparks creativity and allows children with disabilities to make new discoveries and build upon their existing knowledge.

Sensory Play Promotes Social and Emotional Development

Sensory play promotes social interaction and helps children develop their social and emotional skills through engaging with their peers in play. Painting, drawing, and other arts and sensory activities help children with developmental disabilities express their emotions and thoughts. Through the use of a variety of colors, materials, and textures, they can communicate their inner world without using words.

Sensory Play has a Calming Effect

Playing with Play-Dough, coloring, building sandcastles, or engaging in other forms of sensory play has a calming effect and can help children relax when they are anxious, upset, or frustrated. Moreover, sensory play helps kids with developmental disabilities be content and teaches them how to live a happier life.

Sensory Activities for Children with Developmental Disabilities

When you plan sensory activities with kids with special needs, take into consideration how they will experience these activities.
Kids who have physical limitations can enjoy the sensory play by seeing, smelling, tasting, or listening.

Children who are deaf have a hearing impairment can feel the vibrations and feel the music through other senses such as touching or seeing. Children who are visually impaired or blind may benefit from touching different textured objects such as scratchy paper, bumpy rubber balls, soft fabrics, etc.

Children who are overly sensitive to sensory stimulation, like kids on the autism spectrum, may enjoy sensory activities differently. For example, a child may wear a smock or rubber gloves while painting if they get oversensitive about having paint on their hands or clothes.

When you plan sensory play for kids with special needs, always put safety first. Make sure that someone supervises a child and provide help if needed. Be aware of overstimulation and the child’s developmental needs. Finally, ensure that sensory play is age-appropriate and that the child makes the most of it.


What Our Clients Are Saying

  • Leaps and Bounds Physical Therapy

    After five years in practice, I decided that I needed to upgrade the look of my office to allow for optimal patient care. Upon researching some possibilities, I came across the Fun Factory Sensory Gym. I immediately called the company to purchase my own gym unit. We scheduled an install date and in three short days, my gym and my vision were complete. My patients and their parents walk in and are amazed at the beautiful and fun set up. I truly feel that my patients are getting the most effective and efficient care because I have the best equipment to address their individual needs. With the Fun Factory Gym equipment, I am able to help these children improve by Leaps and Bounds!

    Jill Kissel
    Clinic Owner
  • The Kaufman Children’s Center

    The Kaufman Children’s Center was proud to announce an exciting upgrade made here at the KCC. Over a long weekend in late January 2013, we completed a huge remodel to our sensory gym.

     The Kaufman Children's Center
  • Our Fun Factory Sensory Gym has been life changing for our family! The entire experience of having the FFSG team in our home was so enjoyable. The crew’s heart and soul is behind the work they’re doing. From the first phone call, FFSG was committed to helping our family and our 3 small children with their various special needs. We have already experienced the calming effects of the net swing and the multiple ways the entire gym provides sensory input and regulation for our intense sensory seekers. What a great tool for our family and more than worth the investment!

    Heather Helms
    Parent
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