10 Ways Sensory Bins Support Your Child's Development (2024)

They really are! I don’t even like messes, but I know sensory bins are a really valuable tool to help your child’s development!

10 Ways Sensory Bins Support Your Child's Development (1)

Keep reading to find out how I let go of my need for mess-free activities AND why your kids also need to have sensory bins as a part of their education.

Before I was a homeschool mom, I worked in a pediatric rehab setting as a speech-language pathologist.

I was lucky enough to work alongside some fabulous occupational therapists who knew all about sensory issues. They introduced me to the many benefits of sensory bins.

All the kiddos that we saw for therapy loved the bins of pinto beans and would play with them much longer than they did with any other toys.

At that time, I was a young mama of two preschoolers. So, as you can imagine, I jumped on the sensory bin idea very quickly and found an empty plastic tub at home for my two little ones.

No matter what filler I put in it, the sensory bin held my kids’ attention for long periods of time.

I quickly decided that any related mess was a tiny price to pay for happy, involved kids while I got some of my work done around the house.

Jenn Carson
10 Ways Sensory Bins Support Your Child's Development (2)

Here are ten more reasons why you should include a sensory bin in your homeschool.

Some links in this post may be affiliate links, which means that if you click on them, I may make a tiny bit of money, at no extra cost to you.

1. Sensory bins involve all of the senses.

Touch and Smell

As its name implies, kids use their senses while playing with a sensory tub or bin. However, it’s more than just touching and feeling the sensory tub fillers.

Most porous fillers (like rice, beans, paper) can be scented with a couple of drops of essential oils. My favorite oils to add are Eden’s Garden synergy blends Hope, Harmony, or Bee Happy.

Even if you don’t have any essential oils, you could add some vanilla or almond extract from your spice cabinet.

10 Ways Sensory Bins Support Your Child's Development (3)
Taste and Sound

Toddlers will learn that rice and other small objects make a lighter, more delicate sound than larger objects like beans or pebbles.

If your children are at the stage where they explore every object with their mouth, you will need to have taste-safe and choke-safe fillers in their sensory bin.

2. Sensory bins promote self-regulation.

Sensory input (or proprioception–when the body receives information through the senses) helps with body awareness. This also includes awareness of motion and balance.

Playing in a sensory bin can help a child to organize their feelings of where their body parts are in relation to other things.

Sensory bins can also be a technique for calming an upset child. Once they begin to realize that they feel calmer when playing with the sensory bin, they can learn to use it as a way to calm themselves.

10 Ways Sensory Bins Support Your Child's Development (4)

3. Sensory bins promote language development.

Toddlers and preschoolers can learn about basic concepts such as full/empty, up/down, above/below, or same/different while they are pouring, sorting, and moving the objects in the sensory bin.

This is also a great time to introduce new adjectives to give them the words for what they are experiencing.

For example, when exploring the bin pictured below, an older sibling or parent can describe the soft pom poms, pokey pom-poms, smooth hearts, fat hearts, hard rice, and shiny tinsel.

Other times, you could work on the names of new items or action words as the objects are moving.

4. Sensory bins promote fine motor skills.

Adding in kid-friendly tweezers or scoopers to move or pick up the sensory bin filler can strengthen your child’s fine motor skills.

As an added bonus, picking up any small pieces that landed outside of the bin with their fingers is a way to practice fine motor skills too.

10 Ways Sensory Bins Support Your Child's Development (5)

5. Sensory bins promote awareness of physics & how the world works.

Kids can learn so much about how the world works by experimenting with the sensory bin filler.

For example, rice goes through the funnel because it’s small and gravity pulls it through, but beans get stuck in the funnel because they are too big to fit through the hole.

While playing with liquids, they can experience how some items in the bin float, while others sink.

6. Sensory bins promote math skills.

Seeing if it takes more dried corn to fill up container A than it does the smaller container B helps a child learn about volume, the measure of the amount of space of an object.

Using stacking cups is a great way to show that the volume of the number 2 cup plus the number 5 cup equals the volume of the number 7 cup. This means that elementary-age kids can work on their addition and subtraction skills.

You can also use measuring cups to introduce fractions.

By adding some objects to the filler, your child can practice counting or sorting. Playing with different numbers of objects helps with visual-spatial skills, where they can learn about greater than or less than.

7. Sensory bins promote critical thinking skills.

Kids need the opportunity to explore actions and reactions in a safe way. They need the chance to wonder “What will happen if I pour this water into a full cup?” Or “Why didn’t that fall over when I touched it?”

10 Ways Sensory Bins Support Your Child's Development (6)

8. Sensory bins promote imaginative skills.

Pretend play is so important for children because it helps them grow in all areas of development. It can especially help develop their social and emotional understanding of their world.

In other words, children’s pretend play with others supports the development of empathy, creativity, and flexibility. Check out this study that looked at kids who played with dolls versus kids who played on tablets.

9. Sensory bins promote homemaking and life skills.

Most kids want to “do it myself”, right? Playing with the different textures in a sensory bin gives them an opportunity to learn how to do it independently in a safe, less messy way.

For example, with liquids, they can learn to pour so they can eventually pour themselves a glass of milk.

Or they can sweep up the bits that fell out of the bin with a small dustpan and brush.

Finally, they can practice scooping so they will be able to scoop the pet food out of the bag to feed their pets.

10. Sensory bins promote brain development.

All of the ways your child is learning while playing with a sensory bin are building pathways in your child’s brain.

It’s pretty cool that learning actually physically changes the brain.

10 Ways Sensory Bins Support Your Child's Development (7)

Sensory bins are an important tool for your child’s development.

Playing in a sensory bin isn’t just a messy, extra thing on our school list. It can be an extraordinary tool to boost your child’s development. Check out this page of themed ideas for sensory bins.

By the way, some kids are tactile defensive and don’t like the way certain textures feel on their skin. Alisha, an OT mom, has some great advice at YourKidsTable.com about tactile defensiveness and sensory seekers.

Color Rice, Pasta, or Beans

See my directions on how to color rice, pasta, and beans here. You can add scoopers, measuring cups, and funnels to extend the play. The small toys from TOOBS are always a big hit too.

Pin this to your favorite board so you can find it again! And follow Whole Child Homeschool’s Pinterest board Sensory and Body Awareness for more great ideas and activities.

10 Ways Sensory Bins Support Your Child's Development (8)
10 Ways Sensory Bins Support Your Child's Development (9)
10 Ways Sensory Bins Support Your Child's Development (10)
10 Ways Sensory Bins Support Your Child's Development (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Mr. See Jast

Last Updated:

Views: 5920

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (75 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Mr. See Jast

Birthday: 1999-07-30

Address: 8409 Megan Mountain, New Mathew, MT 44997-8193

Phone: +5023589614038

Job: Chief Executive

Hobby: Leather crafting, Flag Football, Candle making, Flying, Poi, Gunsmithing, Swimming

Introduction: My name is Mr. See Jast, I am a open, jolly, gorgeous, courageous, inexpensive, friendly, homely person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.