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Sensory difficulties a teacher might notice in a young child

Teachers often notice sensory difficulties as a child over-reacting to noise, textures, light or touch; under-reacting and seeming unaware; or constantly seeking movement and crashing. Look for patterns most days across activities that affect learning and friendships, then share observations with the family for a developmental check.

Sensory difficulties a teacher might notice in a young child
Sensory difficulties a teacher might notice — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

In a busy classroom, the child who covers their ears at the bell or can't sit still on the mat is often telling you something — about how their senses are working.

In short

Sensory difficulties show up as a child reacting more strongly, or less strongly, than expected to everyday sights, sounds, textures, movement or touch. You might notice a child who is overwhelmed by noise and crowds, or one who seems to crave movement and crashing, or one who simply doesn't notice things others do. These are patterns worth watching and sharing with parents — not a diagnosis, and not something to fear.

What a teacher might notice

Over-responsive (the world feels too much)
  • Covers ears, becomes distressed or melts down at the school bell, assembly noise or hand-dryers
  • Dislikes messy play, glue, sand or finger paint; upset by certain clothing textures or labels
  • Avoids being part of a crowded line; reacts strongly to light touch or being bumped
  • Picky with food textures; gags at certain smells or tastes

Under-responsive (the world feels too quiet)

  • Doesn't respond to name or instructions, though hearing is fine
  • Seems unaware of mess on face or hands, or of minor bumps and scrapes
  • Appears tired, slow to get going, or 'switched off' during quieter tasks

Sensory-seeking (looking for more input)

  • Constantly on the move — fidgeting, spinning, crashing into things or rough play
  • Chews pencils, sleeves or collars; touches everything and everyone
  • Loves jumping, swinging and squeezing; struggles to sit still on the carpet

Motor and coordination knock-on effects

  • Clumsy with scissors, buttons or pencils; trips or falls more than peers
  • Tires quickly with handwriting; poor sitting posture

When to share your concern

A single behaviour on a hard day is normal. What matters is a pattern — difficulties that show up most days, across several activities, and that get in the way of learning, friendships or joining in. When you see that, your observations are gold: note what you see, when and where, and share them gently with the family so a developmental check can be arranged. Sensory differences often travel alongside speech, attention or coordination needs, so a broad look is more useful than focusing on one symptom.

The Pinnacle way

At [Pinnacle Blooms Network](/), our occupational therapy teams help children build steadier, calmer ways of managing sensory input so they can settle and learn. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under the care of a qualified clinician — a teacher's careful observations are a valued starting point, never the conclusion. With 25 million+ therapy sessions and 4.95 lakh+ families supported, we partner with schools to turn classroom notes into clear next steps.

Trusted sources

Guided by the WHO International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), which describes sensory functions (b2) as part of how a child takes part in everyday life and learning.

Next step — jot down what you notice over a week or two, then share it with the child's family and suggest a free developmental check on WhatsApp: +91 91001 81181.

What to watch

Watch for patterns, not one-off days: difficulties that appear most days, across several activities, and that disrupt learning, friendships or joining in. Note when, where and what triggers the reaction — that record helps the family and clinician most.

Try this at home

Offer a calm corner and movement breaks: a child who covers their ears or won't sit still often settles faster with a quiet space, a chewy or fidget tool, or a quick 'heavy work' task like carrying books.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · 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 a child being 'naughty' if they can't sit still or cover their ears?

Often not. These can be sensory responses — the child may be genuinely overwhelmed by noise or be seeking the movement their body craves. Reframing it as a sensory need rather than misbehaviour usually helps you support the child and reduces classroom stress for everyone.

Should I tell parents I think the child has a sensory problem?

Share what you observe, not a label. Describe the specific behaviours, when and where they happen, and suggest a developmental check. Diagnosis is only ever made by a qualified clinician, never from classroom observation alone.

Can sensory difficulties affect a child's learning?

Yes. A child overwhelmed by classroom noise or uncomfortable with writing textures may struggle to concentrate, take part or complete tasks — not because of ability, but because their senses are working overtime. Small classroom adjustments can make a real difference.

When should sensory concerns be assessed?

When the pattern is persistent, shows up across several activities most days, and interferes with learning, play or friendships. At that point, suggest the family arrange a developmental check so a clinician can take a broad look.

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