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Targeted Sensory Integration

Targeted Sensory Integration at Home: Activities for Parents

Targeted sensory integration at home means offering matched sensory input — heavy work, movement, touch and calm-down spaces — through playful daily routines, following your child's lead. Watch what calms versus over-excites your child, and let a clinician tailor the plan for best results.

Targeted Sensory Integration at Home: Activities for Parents
Sensory Integration Activities to Try at Home — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Your living room, garden and bathtub already hold everything you need to help your child's sensory world feel more settled and organised.

In short

Targeted sensory integration at home means offering the right kind of sensory input — movement, deep pressure, touch, sound — in a playful, predictable way that helps your child's nervous system feel calm, alert and ready to engage. You can weave it into everyday play through a few simple, joyful activities. It works best when it's matched to your child, which is why a clinician's guidance makes home practice far more effective.

Activities you can try at home

Think of these as a playful menu — follow your child's lead and stop if they seem overwhelmed.

Heavy work (calming, organising) — proprioception

  • Animal walks: bear crawls, crab walks, frog jumps across the room
  • Helping carry the shopping, pushing a laundry basket, or "squashing" play dough
  • Bear hugs, rolling up in a blanket like a "sausage roll" (face always free)

Movement play (alerting or calming) — vestibular

  • Gentle swinging, rocking, spinning on an office chair — slowly, watching their reaction
  • Balancing on a cushion, hopping on a mattress, swaying to music

Touch and texture — tactile

  • A "sensory bin" of rice, lentils or dry pasta to scoop and pour
  • Finger painting, shaving foam on the bath wall, squishing wet sponges
  • Letting your child choose textures rather than forcing contact

Calm-down corner

  • A quiet tent or cushion nook with dim light for when things feel "too much"

Keep sessions short, end on a happy note, and follow what your child enjoys.

Reading your child's signals

Notice what calms and what over-excites your child. A child seeking lots of movement may settle after heavy work; a child who covers their ears or avoids messy play may need input introduced gently and on their terms. These observations are gold for your therapist — jot them down. This is why a tailored plan from a qualified occupational therapist beats generic activity lists: the same swing can soothe one child and overwhelm another.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — home activities support, but never replace, this. Our therapists turn a general approach into a targeted sensory integration plan built around your specific child, then coach you to carry it into daily life.

Trusted sources

Guided by occupational-therapy guidance from the American Occupational Therapy resources via AAP and HealthyChildren, the WHO Nurturing Care Framework on responsive caregiving, and developmental guidance from the CDC.

Next step — book a sensory profile and meet a Pinnacle occupational therapist who will hand you a home plan made for your child. WhatsApp +91 91001 81181.

This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

What to watch

Watch which inputs calm your child and which over-excite them. Stop any activity that brings distress, covering ears, or tears. If sensory reactions disrupt eating, sleeping, dressing or play across settings, ask for an occupational-therapy review.

Try this at home

Before a tricky transition (bath, bedtime, leaving home), try two minutes of heavy work — bear hugs or carrying something heavy — to help your child feel organised and ready.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · reviewed every 365 days

This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.

Frequently asked

Is doing sensory activities at home enough on its own?

Home activities are wonderful for daily practice, but they work best alongside a plan tailored by a qualified occupational therapist, who matches the right input to your child and adjusts it as they grow.

How do I know if an activity is helping or overwhelming my child?

Helpful input usually leaves a child calmer, more focused or happier to engage. Signs of overwhelm — covering ears, pulling away, distress or tears — mean stop, soothe, and try something gentler. Follow your child's lead.

How long should a home sensory session be?

Short and joyful is better than long. A few minutes woven into play or before a transition often works well. End on a positive note so your child looks forward to it.

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