Tactile and visual senses can be stimulated by fine motor sensory play in the summer. Tactile-seeking kids will love sidewalk chalk as well as activities involving water, finger paint and soap bubbles, while their visual-seeking peers will revel in the challenge of tracking and popping bubbles. Tactile-defensive children can be offered a paint brush to use instead of their fingers, or slowly introduced to touching paint with the suggestion of using one finger only.
Summer parenting tips often include recommendations of eye protection such as sunglasses, which suits the visually defensive child and, along with a sunhat, enables her to participate in more activities outdoors.
Summer fairs and carnivals are teeming with all the fragrance and noise that a sensory seeking child could want. Play dates held in groups have an energetic volume level, and barbecues, campfires and baking activities are aromatic opportunities for the sensory-seeking child to be a parent helper. The defensive child, on the other hand, will likely prefer one-on-one play dates or a quiet walk in the park where the environment is more calming.