Make a Wobble Balance Ice Disc for Proprioception and Vestibular Sensory Play

This ice wobble disk is another one of our favorite ice play activities. My kids LOVED this sensory activity. While we did this one outside on a winter day, it would be fun during the hot Summer, too.

You know how there are just some things you show your kids that are instant hits?  A surprise trip to an amusement park or ice cream for dinner will instantly bring on on the cheers and be one of those days that kids remember long after the awesome day has passed. This Wobble Balance Ice Disc is one of those things.


Add sensory play to the outdoors with this vestibular activity.


We’ve been sharing fun proprioception and sensory ideas recently for winter play and therapy ideas on our January Occupational Therapy calendar.  This ice balance tool is on the calendar and is a balance activity that you really need to try.


Make a wobble balance disc from ice for sensory input and balance training. This helps kids with attention, strengthening, and fidgeting while incorporating sensory needs like proprioception and vestibular integration.


Wobble Disc for fidgeting, balance, and core muscle strength

Full disclosure: This post contains affiliate links.
 

Wobble cushions
come in many shapes and sizes. There are seat cushions that help with attention and fidgeting while seated, balance boards
for vestibular input, and therapy balls
that can provide proprioceptive input.  All of these tools are capable of helping kids with sensory needs.  A balance disc or wedge provides feedback to a child’s body, allowing them to get their “wiggles” out.  They are challenged to make minute corrections to their core body to compensate for movements of the unstable surface. This is a great way to work on balance and core muscle strength deficits that are often seen in children with sensory needs. 


Make a wobble balance disc from ice for sensory input and balance training. This helps kids with attention, strengthening, and fidgeting while incorporating sensory needs like proprioception and vestibular integration.

Ice balance wobble disc

This was a cold weather activity, although it could be a big hit in the hot summer weather.  You could also re-create the experience in a bathtub or baby pool brought into the indoors.  Freeze a disk of water in a large plastic bowl.  You want the frozen ice cube to be large enough for your child to sit on and thick enough that it doesn’t break when your child sits and stands on it.  A large plastic popcorn bowl works well for creating an ice disk.  Simply fill the bottom with water and place into the freezer (or outside if it’s cold enough!) 


When the water has frozen, run warm water over the outside of the bowl to remove the ice.  Then, take it outside for sitting on. Place a folded dishtowel on the ice and have your child sit on the flat surface.  They can hold onto the edge of the disc with the towel protecting their hands from the cold ice. Your child can balance and spin on a hard surface like a sidewalk.  The snowy balance disk makes a great ice sled, too.  If you are doing this activity indoors, bring a baby pool into the house and spin and wobble in the pool. 

Make a wobble balance disc from ice for sensory input and balance training. This helps kids with attention, strengthening, and fidgeting while incorporating sensory needs like proprioception and vestibular integration.

Wobble Disc for Proprioceptive Input

Sitting or standing on an unstable surface like a wobble disc is a great way to provide proprioceptive input.  Ask the child to sit on the ice disc and balance themselves as you hold their hands.  You can pull the child along a flat surface to provide proprioceptive input through their arms.  Then, ask the child to push themselves along using their legs.  They can pull their legs forward or push themselves backwards to incorporate difference muscle groups. For a greater challenge, have the child stand on the disk, holding onto your arms for support. This strengthening activity challenges balance while providing proprioception through the arms and upper body.

Make a wobble balance disc from ice for sensory input and balance training. This helps kids with attention, strengthening, and fidgeting while incorporating sensory needs like proprioception and vestibular integration.

Wobble Disc for Vestibular Input

Have the child sit on the ice disc as they are pushed along on a flat surface like a porch or driveway.  Have another child push the child on their low back to get proprioceptive input to the pushing child. Practice balancing back and forth in a seated position for more vestibular input.

Make a wobble balance disc from ice for sensory input and balance training. This helps kids with attention, strengthening, and fidgeting while incorporating sensory needs like proprioception and vestibular integration.
 
 
Looking for more sensory activities? Try these:
  Oobleck in the Marble Run  Alphabet Discovery Bottle

How to incorporate sensory play into playing outside

 
Many sensory diet activities can naturally be found outdoors. In fact, outdoor sensory diet activities are a fun way to encourage sensory input in a child’s environment and without fancy therapy equipment or tools. 

It’s a fact that kids are spending less time playing outdoors. From after-school schedules to two working parents, to unsafe conditions, to increased digital screen time, to less outdoor recess time…kids just get less natural play in the outdoors. Some therapists have connected the dots between less outdoor play and increased sensory struggles and attention difficulties in learning. 
 
Knowing this, it can be powerful to have a list of outdoor sensory diet activities that can be recommended as therapy home programing and family activities that meet underlying needs.
 
That’s where the Outdoor Sensory Diet Cards and Sensory Challenge Cards come into play.
 
They are a FREE printable resource that encourages sensory diet strategies in the outdoors. In the printable packet, there are 90 outdoor sensory diet activities, 60 outdoor recess sensory diet activities, 30 blank sensory diet cards, and 6 sensory challenge cards. They can be used based on preference and interest of the child, encouraging motivation and carryover, all while providing much-needed sensory input.
 
Here’s a little more information about the Outdoor Sensory Diet Cards
  • 90 outdoor sensory diet activities
  • 60 outdoor recess sensory diet activities
  • 30 blank sensory diet cards, and 6 sensory challenge cards
  • They can be used based on preference and interest of the child, encouraging motivation and carryover, all while providing much-needed sensory input. 
  • Research tells us that outdoor play improves attention and provides an ideal environment for a calm and alert state, perfect for integration of sensory input.
  • Outdoor play provides input from all the senses, allows for movement in all planes, and provides a variety of strengthening components including eccentric, concentric, and isometric muscle contractions. 
  • Great tool for parents, teachers, AND therapists!
Be sure to grab the Outdoor Sensory Diet Cards and use them with a child (or adult) with sensory processing needs!
 
Outdoor sensory diet activity cards for parents, teachers, and therapists of children with sensory processing needs.

Top 5 Activities for Kids 2015

What a year 2015 has been here at Sugar Aunts.  We’ve had a few small changes (like our new look and colors) and big changes (like so many new followers on all social media outlets).  I have had an absolute blast sharing developmental information and Occupational Therapy tips and ideas to readers (that’s you!).  The best part of my year, though, has been hearing from you.  I love knowing that a creative tip for correcting pencil grasp or a visual perceptual activity has helped your child, your therapy caseload, entire school districts, Occupational Therapy clinics…I love hearing from you!


I’m joining a few other bloggers in sharing my most popular posts of the year.  When I went through my analytics and saw the posts that were in my top 5, it made me so happy!  All of my favorite things that I love to share with you are in there and it makes me super excited for everything I’ve got in store for this blog in the new year.  I can’t wait to share more of things like this that you all loved!




Posts you loved on Sugar Aunts in 2015:
(This post contains affiliate links.)

Occupational Therapy Tips for Kids

My 31 Days of Occupational Therapy series was the overwhelmingly biggest traffic referrer in 2015.  And that makes my heart so happy!  I have found such excitement in sharing what I know in new and creative ways.  If my tips and ideas can help even one child, my day is made.  Be sure to stick around, because 2016 is going to bring a ton more OT posts!

Sensory Play Ideas for Kids

How to Make an Awesome Sensory Bottle was a fun little round up of cool sensory bottles, along with tips and ways to make an awesome sensory tool.  I love that this post was in my top 5, because I’ve got a thing for sharing sensory activities on the blog.  This year will bring a monthly sensory bottle series so there will be many more sensory bottles and other sensory play and therapy ideas coming your way!

Sensory Homemade Play Dough Recipes

Did I mention how much I love sharing sensory activities, tips, tools, and ideas?  Another post that was a hit this year was How to Make Crayon Floam Dough.  My kids love playing with homemade playdough and this floam dough was very much loved by them…and you!  2016 will bring monthly sensory dough posts from me, so be sure to watch for them.  I know my kids are looking forward to them!

Cooking With Kids Recipes 

This past year, we participated in a Cooking With Kids A-Z series and it was just perfect.  I had the chance to cook through the alphabet alongside my kids as we learned and explored in the kitchen.  My kids love to help me cook and I love that they are learning and exploring new foods and the senses in the kitchen. This Carrot Veggie Puffs Recipe was a huge traffic source this year, and I know why: Mamas love to sneak the veggies into yummy food that kids will gobble up!  I love that this recipe was one of the top posts this year.  It came from a version of one I found in my grandmother’s recipe box and I know she would love to see so many of you trying it! This year will bring a fun cooking-related project.  Stay tuned to see what it is!

Book Related Crafts and Activities for Kids

And the last of my top five posts in 2015 was a book-related activity.  We read Quick as a Cricket
by Audrey Wood and made an activity on How to teach kids about empathy based on the book.  We love to read books and come up with activities and crafts.  The new year will bring more book-related posts, a book-related project, and even an Instagram book series.  It’s going to be a fun year of reading!

The best crafts, education, and parenting blog posts of 2015

Did you love reading about these topics? I’ve got a ton more ways to play and learn for you!  Try these: