Expand Your Classroom With Nature-Based Sensory Activities - Project Learning Tree (2024)

Expand Your Classroom With Nature-Based Sensory Activities - Project Learning Tree (1)

Sensory activities are a great way to enhance learning by introducing elements of play, discovery, and creativity into the classroom. Explore the world outside or bring the outside in with these nature-based sensory activities.

You’ll find something for every discipline, from math to science to art. Continue reading to the very end to learn how to plan activities that meet the sensory needs of all students, including those with special or diverse needs.

If you plan to try some of these nature-based sensory activities, consider using the following activities found in PLT’s Trees & Me: Activities for Exploring Nature with Young Children to help young learners ages 1-6 explore nature using their senses.

Activity 1: The Shape of Things — Children search for the shapes and colors that define both our natural and built environments.

Activity 2: Sounds Around — Children explore the sounds of nature and imitate them using their own voices and instruments that they make together.

Activity 3: Tree Textures — Children explore trees and their parts using the sense of touch.

Activity 4: Follow Your Nose — Children explore trees and tree parts using their senses of smell and taste.

Expand Your Classroom With Nature-Based Sensory Activities - Project Learning Tree (2)

Remember to look at the Group Experiences for each activity for ideas on how to get students exploring their senses through music, movement, and other activities that encourage conversation and interaction.

Adapting Activities for Students With Different Sensory Needs

There are ways for all children to enjoy nature, including students with special needs. Consider these tips to make these activities even more inclusive for every student:

  • Use sound-reducing headphones for activities that may be loud for kids sensitive to sound.
  • Adapt activities as needed. Some students may need more time or additional modeling to complete activities. Some may benefit from fewer steps. The objective is learning at each student’s level.
  • Reward students with preferred sensory activities if they participated in a challenging activity. The reward could be time spent at a sensory wall or with a favorite classroom item.
  • Consider scaffolding ahead of activities that may prove challenging for students with sensory needs. Enlist the help of occupational therapists or speech-language pathologists at your school site if available.
  • Maintain a safe, inclusive space! Create opportunities for creative groupings. Students with classroom aides or paraprofessionals should be integrated with other student-led groups rather than separated.

Nature-Based Sensory Activities

Consider pairing these nature-based sensory ideas with these activities from PLT’s Explore Your Environment: K-8 Activity Guide to engage students in exploring their environment and adapt activities for different learners with differing abilities:

Peppermint Beetle — Students explore their sense of smell and discover why smell is important to animals, including beetles and humans.

The Closer You Look — though students may be very familiar with trees, they may not have thought much about the actual structure of a tree. In this activity, your students will go explore the sensations of sight and touch while taking a closer look at trees and their parts.

Expand Your Classroom With Nature-Based Sensory Activities - Project Learning Tree (3)

Musical Forest

Make the forest sing with activities that bring classroom instruments and other materials outside for a nature concert. Create your own water xylophone that doubles as a STEM experiment and teaching tool about how water levels change sounds and pitch. Decorate a tree with small bells and cymbals, or tie the same to walking sticks that jingle when they are shaken. Get creative with ways to use nature as your instrument.

Exploratory Nature Walk

Take the kids on a scavenger hunt for different textures. Show them examples of items they may find that are rough, smooth, hard, soft, even spikey before sending them out to find some on their own. Differentiate between textures and shapes, as the concept can get confusing for younger children. The activity can turn into a fun sorting activity once you’re back in the classroom.

Be sure to keep safety in mind when exploring by touch outside. Check areas for poison oak or ivy, thorns, or anything that could scratch, prick, poke, or cause harm to students.

Tactile Wall

Tactile walls aren’t only great for sensory rooms as a tool for sensory stimulation. They’re also a great way to display items found on nature walks for continued learning in the classroom! Use them for lessons on textures and senses and to create a space where touch and physical exploration is encouraged. Leave the wall open during free-play for students to participate at their leisure.

Nature Sounds

Take the students on a nature walk and record the different sounds you hear. Play the sounds back in the classroom and see if they can identify the birds, crickets, crunchy leaves, and babbling creeks from your casual afternoon field trip. It can also serve as background noise for in-class meditation activities or periods of transition throughout the day.

Smelling Bottles

Repurpose empty herb bottles or other plastic jars as smelling bottles. Put different objects in each jar, but make sure the students can’t see what’s inside. Tree bark, fresh and dry leaves, cut grass, and a variety of flowers would all work quite well. Use whatever can be found in their immediate environment. Ask the students what they smell using descriptive words. This is a great team activity if you’re working with a larger group.

Flower Petal Painting

Blend lessons on color, texture, and shapes with art in a flower petal painting activity. Use flowers that are readily available outside your classroom. (This makes an excellent springtime or Mother’s Day activity when flowers are more likely to be in full bloom.) Urge your students to get creative with patterns and color combinations to make art prints that are truly unique.

Nature Color Wheel

Create color wheels using paint samples and clothespins and have students match things they find outside to their color wheels. Make sure to choose colors that are represented in your environment, especially if you’re working with a season that may not be as colorful. A fun twist is returning to the project again when the seasons change. See if the kids can find examples of items they found from one season to the next.

Mirror Exploration

Mirrors and reflective surfaces are already a great way to teach kids about self-awareness, multi-step directions, recognizing feelings, and light and reflections. Bring nature into it by placing a variety of items found in nature on sturdy, unbreakable reflective surfaces. Explore ideas like symmetry and differences with color and light with natural items.

Sensory Bags

Create sensory bags using leaves and other natural materials like wildflowers that won’t poke holds through the sealed plastic bags. For your youngest set, fill them yourself, adding biodegradable glitter or larger chunks of confetti to add color to their sensory experience. Older students may want to create their own with items they’ve found themselves, or play an “I Spy”-style game with what they see inside.

Check out these ideas for more leaf activities.

Sensory Bins

Create sensory bins that inspire imaginative play, turn-taking skills, and motor development. Limiting play to bins keeps classroom spaces tidy, too, especially if you add dirt, water, or grass to these nature bins. Sensory bins are a great way to introduce little ones to the changing seasons, too. A nature sensory bin in the spring will likely look—and feel!—quite a bit different than a winter bin.

Sorting Activity

Tap into students’ sensory skills and introduce them to basic counting and sorting concepts with these modified sensory bags. If the focus is on nature, substitute the frozen peas for seeds, small rocks, or any other objects found in their immediate environment. Mix them up for sensory sorting activities. You can even use small acorns with younger students just learning these concepts, as long as they don’t poke holes through your bags.

Barefoot Sensory Walk

Large-scale sensory walks may require some additional buy-in from school staff, but you can create mobile walks using plastic bins or tubs. Bring them outside on a sunny day for a recess activity that explores your students’ sense of touch. Traditional sensory bin materials include shaving cream, colored water, or water beads. Ditch the disposable plastic products often found in sensory bins and bump up the connection to nature with grass or turf, pebbles, sand, and wooden blocks. Have towels on hand if you’re working with water!

Sensory Bottles

Many children are natural collectors. Tap into that instinct with these sensory bottles filled with items they find out in their natural environment. This can also be a good sorting activity before the leaves, rocks, sticks, and other items make their way inside the bottles. Little ones can use the finished project as a sensory tool, but older students can create mini-biomes inside to go with their science units.

Playdough Nature Art

Most classrooms have a well-stocked pantry of playdough on hand, even making their own from time to time. Inspire students to add elements of nature to their play with playdough nature art. Create leaf imprints, nature nests, or simply shape the playdough into things found in their natural environments.

Nature is the perfect classroom helper. Expose your students to activities that will get them excited about being outside, and learning more about their environment.

Check out our Pinterest page for even more ideas for fun activities for young learners.

Use PLT’s Pocket Guide: Seeds to Trees to introduce young students to nature by encouraging exploration and discovery through the lens of trees and forests using their senses. Activities include:

Shape Hike — This is like a game of “I Spy” with a mission. Children explore how natural objects, such as leaves, rocks, or acorns, have different shapes.

Nature Sounds — By listening carefully, a whole new world of sounds is revealed.

Tree Parts — Through their sense of touch, children explore different parts of a tree.

Trees in Our Lives Children — consider the many products from trees around them, from the places they live to toys to apples.

Expand Your Classroom With Nature-Based Sensory Activities - Project Learning Tree (4)

  • Bio

Expand Your Classroom With Nature-Based Sensory Activities - Project Learning Tree (5)

Rebecca Reynandez

Rebecca Reynandez is a Marketing and Communications Consultant and Principal of Spring Media Strategies, LLC. She has worked with nonprofits for the past 10 years and currently focuses on working with environmental organizations. She is based in Minneapolis, MN.

Expand Your Classroom With Nature-Based Sensory Activities - Project Learning Tree (2024)

FAQs

How can we provide sensory opportunities in the classroom and outdoors? ›

Nature-Based Sensory Activities
  1. Musical Forest. Make the forest sing with activities that bring classroom instruments and other materials outside for a nature concert. ...
  2. Smelling Bottles. ...
  3. Flower Petal Painting. ...
  4. Nature Color Wheel. ...
  5. Mirror Exploration. ...
  6. Sensory Bags. ...
  7. Sensory Bins. ...
  8. Barefoot Sensory Walk.

How do sensory activities help children learn about their environment? ›

Sensory play also helps babies to learn more about the world around them and supports language development as they learn to respond to different stimuli. Babies can enjoy simple sensory play such as touching different objects and surfaces and hearing how different materials create varied sounds.

How to incorporate nature into the classroom? ›

One of the most straightforward ways to incorporate nature into your classroom is by giving students an option to choose where they can work. For instance, you can set up a designated area in your classroom where students can comfortably sit while surrounded by plants, flowers, or any other green elements.

What is nature-based learning? ›

Nature-based learning occurs in natural settings and where elements of nature have been brought into built environments. It includes learning about the natural world, but extends to engagement in any subject, skill or interest while in natural surroundings.

How can I make my classroom more sensory friendly? ›

Classroom materials
  1. bins for keeping materials organized.
  2. centers with a variety of activities.
  3. mini-carpets to sit on at circle time or center time.
  4. a variety of books to read at various reading levels.
  5. fidgets.
  6. visual timers.
  7. visual planners.
  8. bean bag chairs.

What are some ways sensory learning can be used in the classroom? ›

Multisensory teaching refers to methods of instruction for students that engage multiple senses in the learning process. For example, a teacher might use tools such as felt or magnetic letters in a tactile activity with a student, engaging both touch and sight senses to help a child build their letter knowledge.

What do children learn from sensory activities? ›

One of the main benefits of sensory play for preschoolers is that it encourages them to use their senses to explore their environment and discover new things. This then helps them develop their problem-solving and critical thinking skills, as they learn to make connections and identify patterns.

Why is it important to have a sensory area in the classroom? ›

A sensory room is a calm space devoted to relaxing and developing the senses. Unlike a regular classroom, where each pupil is mostly expected to listen to the teacher, a sensory room provides children with the autonomy and freedom to analyze the self environment using their senses in their time.

How can you help sensory seeking in the classroom? ›

INCLUDE SENSORY PLAY ACTIVITIES IN THEIR DAY: Sensory play helps an over- responsive/sensory sensitive child to explore new situations. Sensory play helps provide an under-responsive child/sensory seeker with the input they crave/seek. flour paper mache. textures such as card, cotton wool, crepe, paper.

What is one example of how nature can improve learning? ›

Nature may promote learning by improving learners' attention, levels of stress, self-discipline, interest and enjoyment in learning, and physical activity and fitness.

What are the benefits of nature in classroom? ›

Playing outdoors and exploring nature also engages children's senses which fosters their cognitive growth, creativity, and critical thinking. Through interacting with other children, they develop social skills, learn to share, solve problems, and work together.

How can you support sensory needs in the classroom? ›

Provide a sensory space where the child can access their sensory needs. Plan a sensory timetable / diet so the child has regular opportunities for the sensory input they require. Provide sensory resources to meet the individual needs and interests of the child. Provide 'choices' of sensory activities for the child.

How does outdoor learning link to sensory development? ›

Outdoor education provides a lot of helpful tools and activities for children to practice their sensory processing. You can think of climbing structures, climbing trees, swinging, obstacles and tactile activities. Children use those tools to push, pull, climb over, touch, jump on, or jump from.

How do we support children's interaction between the indoor and outdoor environments? ›

By providing children with materials, resources and information, educators can help children to appreciate and respect the beauty of their natural and built environments. Select resources and design learning environments that foster children's connections with the natural environment.

How can you support learning in the outdoor environment? ›

The addition of gardening, sports, fitness equipment, music, and natural habitats for exploration can help school-age children learn beyond the school day. Just like in the classroom or school-age program, staff must make sure outdoor spaces are organized for independence, engagement, and learning.

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