Sensory rooms can vary widely in its design depending on the senses it is trying to cultivate. If it’s designed for hypersensitive children who need a space to calm down and recalibrate, it can be a relaxation room filled with soothing sounds, muted lighting, smoother textures and comfortable chairs to lounge in.
If it’s to cultivate and foster creative development using their senses, it can be a nook or corner filled with sensory materials that let children transform objects with various textures into a product of their imagination. It can also help them familiarise themselves with new sounds, textures, and sights they still need some practice on.
The Takeaway
While sensory processing problems in a child may lead parents or carers to believe that the child may be on the autism spectrum or have another disorder like ADHD or OCD, it may just be a developmental delay. The child may be perfectly fine and may only need more familiarisation or desensitisation to certain sensory settings.
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