When you’re playing with your toddler, do you often find that they want to climb on you or push their body into yours? If so, that’s completely normal! Toddlers seek sensory experiences that help them explore the world and regulate themselves—and Courtney English, a pediatric occupational therapist, is offering five toddler activities you can do with your little ones to help encourage this kind of play in safe, fun ways in a new TikTok video.

Before we dive in, note that most of these exercises involve props. While you’re not required to get these by any means, if you’re looking for toys that serve a dual purpose (for example, both play and sensory stimulation), the ones used in this video could be great to add to your list.

@courtneyenglish.ot

Toddler activities to support sensory proceesing in your little ones! #momsoftiktok #toddlermom #toddlersoftiktok #toddleractivities #sensoryprocessing #sensoryactivities #pediatricot #pediatricoccupationaltherapy #occupationaltherapy

♬ Would That I (True that I saw her hair like the branch of a tree) – Hozier

Here are the five activities English recommends to help calm bouncy little bunnies:

1. Foot Squeezes

The first activity is foot squeezes, which she says she uses before naps or bedtime to help her toddler relax and prepare for rest. Simply squish your toddler’s little feet all over while you’re cuddling on the couch or lying in bed.

2. Tactile Balance Disc

The second is a tactile balance disc, which has a pebbly surface for toddlers to stand on while they balance on the floor. English says they use this in two ways: either to pick up from the floor and toss into a bucket or to stand on, which stimulates multiple different senses at once.

3. Balance Pods

The third toddler activity English recommends is balance pods, which she sets up as an obstacle course for her toddler to cross. While she has specific props for this, you could easily use household objects to create platforms for your toddler to balance on and recreate this activity.

4. Play Couches

Fourth on the list is play couches, a popular toddler toy consisting of plush modular cushions that can be used as a couch or separated to build forts and more. English recommends using them to create obstacle courses to stimulate the senses while building motor skills.

5. Tactile Discs

Finally, the fifth toddler activity is tactile discs, which are similar to the balance discs above but sit flat on the floor. These are great for toddlers to stand on while eating if they have a hard time sitting still, English says.

As you’ve probably gathered by now, all of these activities include movement and work to engage your toddler’s senses. So even if you don’t have the same toys English uses, you can definitely look for opportunities to recreate these activities using household items with different textures for your toddler to touch and feel as they play.

Before dinner. After bath. You don’t need long to enjoy these toddler activities

The toddler stage is both exciting and challenging. It’s incredible to watch tots foster their curiosity, lean into their personalities, and make strides toward independence. It’s also, let’s face it, exhausting to keep them entertained and tantrum-free on a regular basis. So whether you need ideas to add to your daily schedule or a quick fix in an emergency, these 10-minute or less toddler activities are easy ways to have bursts of fun anytime, anywhere.

a toddler dances in a yellow dress in front of her dad, toddler activities
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1. Have a Dance Party

Throw on some music and dance it out. Choose from our roundup of the best Spotify playlists, and spike your heart rate to a family-friendly tune. It’s also a great way to shake things up when your little one is feeling grumpy.

2. Act Out a Book

While reading a book together is always a good idea, acting one out could be even more fun. If your toddler has a favorite book they’re obsessed with, dig into the dress-up box and have them try to act out a live-action version.

3. Play Simon Says

Play this old favorite but with a twist. We love using Simon Says to help pick up a messy room. Simon says, “Put your toy in the chest” is a parenting hack that clears clutter while entertaining toddlers.

5. Act Like an Animal

Get wild with this one! Ask your child what their favorite animal is and encourage them to play a quick animal action game.  Challenge your child to move like the animal, running, crawling, leaping, lumbering, or slithering like a furry, feathered, or scaled friend.

a toddler activities with stuffed animals, girl hugs stuffed animal she found while her mom laughs
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6. Play Hide-and-Seek with Stuffies

If you don’t have the energy to squeeze behind the couch or want to play hide and seek in a small space, try playing with one of your toddlers’ favorite stuffed animals.

7. Throw a Bath Party

Ain’t no party like a bathtub party! Turn off the lights, toss in the glow sticks and bubble wands, and crank the music.

8. Play Eye-Spy

It’s a time-tested classic and a traditional game that just about every child plays at some point or another. It’s also easily adaptable, requires no materials, and takes almost no time to complete. Put a twist on the same old game and set up your “I Spy” with a theme. Pick a letter (all things that begin with “B”), a color (only purple objects), or any other focus that your kiddo can dream up.

9. Have A Puzzle Marathon

Break out two or three of your toddler’s favorite puzzles and set a timer to see how fast you can complete them all.

10. Play Florist

Collect branches, ferns, and a few blooms and arrange them in a pretty vase or jar. Toddlers also love playing shop, so make believe you’re their first satisfied customer.

11. Play Follow the Leader

Get creative with the classic “follow the leader” game. Choose a theme (such as acting like animals or moving like snowflakes), create super-silly walks, or explore outside with a follow-the-leader nature walk.

a little girls with pigtails sits by a painting with a sun and paints, toddler activities
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12. Create a Card for a Loved One

Surprise a friend or relative with a homemade card from you and your toddler. They’ll have fun stamping, coloring, and creating a fun design, and the recipient will be thrilled with the surprise mail.

13. Wash Windows Together

Their willingness to help with household chores wanes as they get older, so take advantage of your toddler’s excitement for spraying and wiping and get some sparkling windows in the process.

14. Tic Tac Toe

When it comes to toddler activities, the paper and pencil version of this classic is always fun. Or try spicing it up by hunting for objects to serve as x’s and o’s.

15. Play Red Light, Green Light

Strengthen their listening skills with a quick game of Red Light Green Light. In addition to being fun, you can talk to your toddler about the importance of following instructions, a skill their preschool teacher will certainly appreciate.

Say bye-bye to bedtime struggles when you let these outdoor toddler activities do the heavy lifting

The first clue that you’re getting close to that most coveted of all parenting coups, the Total Toddler Bedtime Knockout, is the uncontrollable laughter. It comes right after sweaty head territory but before hilarity turns into hysteria. And, if you’ve worn out your toddler from sunup to sundown, you can bypass the hysterical stage of the evening altogether and sail smoothly into bedtime. And when it really comes down to it, isn’t an easy bedtime with a tuckered-out tot every parent’s dream? 

1. Plan a scavenger hunt. Whether you pull a pre-organized list off the internet or create your own, enjoy watching your toddler expend some serious energy while hunting for one item after another.

Our favorite way to wear them out is simple: Number ten squares of paper and take a close-up photo of the area where it’s hidden. These should be recognizable but make them think—sticking out from under doormats with bright patterns, underneath dog bowls, or in dad’s shoe are all good spots. Then let your kid flip through one image at a time on your photo roll as they collects each of the squares of paper. Once they’re all found, they can be traded for a prize (or not).  This works especially well for kids who are non-readers because the photos are easy clues (and what toddler doesn’t know how to work an iPhone)?

2. Play hopscotch. Between drawing the board with chalk on your driveway, numbering the squares, finding the perfect rock and then hopping through a few rounds, this is a solid bet. Try it in the morning when the heat hasn’t set in. They’ll play for longer and burn more energy.

3. Host a bubble dance party. What could be easier than turning on the bubble machine paired with kid-friendly tunes and letting the kids dance, dance, dance the day away. Let them shake their thing or add a freeze dance challenge if they need some extra laughs.

Related: Spotify Playlists for Babies & Toddlers Parents Will Actually Enjoy

4. Make homemade ice cream. I know. Sugar. Kids. Doesn’t seem like the best way to tire them out, right? But with nothing but two Ziploc bags, heavy whipping cream, sugar (or fruit), ice, and rock salt—and the most important ingredient here: elbow grease—you can make it happen. Just place the ice cream ingredients into a smaller bag, then place that bag inside of a larger one that’s filled with ice and a handful of rock salt. Then shake, shake, shake to create their (and your) new favorite treat.

5. Make a mess with shaving cream. Whether you’re inside (stick to the bathroom in this case) or outside, shaving cream is an easy and inexpensive way to have sensory play. Let them paint on their legs, give themselves mustaches or even fill a baby pool with it to squish between their toes. It’s easy to wipe off and wash out in a bathtub.

6. Make bird feeders using peanut butter (or sun butter), pine cones and bird food. Tie a string to the bottom of the pine cone and hang it from a tree that’s easy to see from inside. For older kids, keep a log of every type of bird you see and make a chart of which ones visit most.

7. Play in a mud-kitchen. Even if you don’t have an official mud kitchen, you make make one on the fly. Fill a kiddie swimming pool with a few scoops of dirt, turn on the hose and make mud. Add a couple of construction trucks and you’re on the verge of hours of messy, happy play.

8. Let them build anything they want out of cardboard boxes. To amp up the fun, give them tissue paper, glue and other found objects to decorate.

9. Paint rocks. Turn them into ladybugs, the Earth, hearts, or load them up with abstract designs. Then send your kid(s) out into the yard to find the rocks a perfect home. Or go big by hiding them around the neighborhood. The extra walking should help tucker them out.

10. Play freeze tag. The person who is “it” tries to tag the others. Once you’ve been tagged, you have to stand (frozen in the position you were in when you were tagged) until another “untagged” person can tag you to free you.

11. Fill small, handheld water pistols with diluted non-toxic paint. Let them shoot their pistols at a canvas (or perhaps, a shower curtain) to create awesome abstract art.

12. Have a water balloon fight. Now that it doesn’t take more than a few minutes to get a serious pile of water balloons filled, adding this to your toddler outdoor activities list is easy. Fill ’em up and have fun tossing them at each other or just lobbing them into the yard. Even better? Cleaning up the pieces will tire them out just as much as throwing them did.

13. Freeze small objects (matchbox cars, doll shoes, marbles, keys, etc.) in bowls of ice. Let the bowl sit in a lukewarm bath to loosen the block of ice, then turn it out onto a cookie sheet. Encourage them to be ice archaeologists, chipping away with spoons and forks to reveal what’s frozen inside. This is especially fun to do in the afternoon when it’s too hot to run around but you still need some outdoor activities. A set of gloves will help keep hands from getting too cold.

14. Go on a bike ride. Break out that balance bike and put some miles on it between dinner and bath time. We guarantee an easy bedtime for your little cyclist.

Related: The Best Bath Toys, According to Amazon Parents

15. Wash your car or your dog or their outdoor ride-on toys. Toddlers love a good soap bucket, rag, and hose—not to mention a sense of accomplishment.

16. For the littlest artists, provide cotton balls, a bowl of water, and construction paper for lots of easy and mess-free entertainment. They’ll love dipping the cotton balls into the water, squeezing them out, and making designs. The trick here is to keep them from over-saturating the paper to the point of tearing—which is no fun for anyone.

17. Set up a tent in the back yard, build a “fire pit” and pretend to be on a campout.

18. Create an obstacle course and time them as they complete it. Simple obstacles work best, so look for a tree to race around and back, set up some outdoor pillow cushions to jump over, draw a start and finish line with chalk for tricycle or scooter racing and incorporate climbing and going down a slide in your back yard.

19. Have your little one stay in character when you play a quick game of animal charades. No prep necessary for this easy guessing game. Just pick your favorite animal and go for it. With each successful guess, trade places and start again. Ee-i-ee-i-o!

20. Have a superhero showdown. You might be ducking to avoid Batman’s (imaginary) gadgets and Spidey’s web all afternoon but the nonstop giggle-fest will be worth the effort.

21. Use windows as a creative space. Give your kids brushes and spray bottles, and watch them paint, clear, and paint again. Washing windows was never so much fun. Don’t forget your squeegee.

22. Catch lightning bugs. If you can. Watch them twinkle in a glass jar (remember to poke holes in the lid) filled with grass.

23. Climb, swing, and slide at a local playground. Nothing says “get that energy out” quite like a local playground. Plan to spend an hour at yours before heading home for bath, stories, and lights out.

On select Tuesdays Sept. 13Jan. 31 children 5 years old and younger can join in special toddler activities at LEGOLAND Discovery Center. The event takes place 10 a.m.-noon with free coffee and muffins served on the first Tuesday of every month! Tickets are $7 online and annual pass memberships are free. Click here to learn more.

There’s a brand new baby brand in the US that you’re going to love. Singapore import Oribel brings two new launches to the kiddie arena that boast both beauty and brains in their design and functionality. Keep reading to learn about the adorable and multi-functional Peripop stroller blankets and the PortaPlay Convertible Activity Center. We bet you’ll put both on your baby’s wish list!

The Cutest & Coolest New Stroller Blanket

Bottom line: Oribel’s Peripops are absolutely adorable. You can choose from four animal designs – Foxey, Beary, Tiggy and Pandy – each one is solid colored on one side, and when flipped has a brightly colored pattern to show off. They’re great as an accent in the nursery or playroom and offer a sweet little spot for your baby to practice his tummy time.

What makes it special? As you can see, this isn’t your average square or rectangular shaped blanket. The animal shape not only give it a cute overload draw, but the head of the animal can fold over your stroller’s child bar to keep it in place on cool days. Even cooler? You can stuff these genius little blankets with your baby’s outgrown clothes, no longer used swaddling blankets or old, stained burp clothes. Now, filled with your unwanted stuff, it becomes a soft cushion your kiddo will enjoy well into his toddler years.

Peripops are available on amazon.com, $69.

A Better Activity Center

Once your baby is about 5 months or so, an activity center can give you a few key moments of independent play. Orible’s version the PortaPlay Convertible Activity Center gets our seal of approval for a few reasons.

Bottom line: First, it’s more pleasant to look at than some of your other options – and let it be known that this will take up residence in your living room for awhile. Your little guy can work on strengthening his leg muscles as he bounces in the seat and he’ll develop fine motor skills, grasping skills and hand eye coordination as he explores all of the moving, rattling and chewable parts.

How it grows with your child: We love baby gear that has a long life and multiple uses. This activity center won’t get tossed into your storage area after your baby’s first birthday. Remove the toys and seat, fill the hole with a wooden top and you have a perfect play table for all those toddler activities that lie ahead – think Playdough, coloring and tea parties.

PortaPlay Convertible Activity Center is available on amazon.com, $149.

What Oribel Peripop would fit in your baby’s nursery? Tell us in a Comment.

–Julie Seguss