Rhonda Franz: Sensory Activities with Rice {National Rice Month}

Rice isn’t just for eating, you know.

Rice can be used for crafts and to keep salt from clumping and as the noisemaking element in a homemade rain stick.

As a wedding guest, I have thrown rice at brides and grooms running from their ceremony to their decorated getaway car. As a special education teacher, I used dry rice to help my students develop fine motor skills and as a tool for working on sensory issues.  As a mom, I’ve used dry rice at home with my children as they developed their imagination while working on measurement concepts, and used the rice as a calming when a child needed a few minutes of quiet.

Specific skills children can work on with tubs of textured materials:

  • For children who avoid certain textures, allowing play in dry rice provides a structured way for them to develop a tolerance to the littlest of surfaces that bother them when they walk or wear certain clothing.
  • For children who seek certain textures, allowing play in dry rice lets them get that sensory input.
  • Pinching rice between fingers and scooping up a batch with hands gives children hand eye coordination practice.

pinching rice between fingers sensory activities rhonda franz

  • Experimenting with measuring cups, spoons and funnels helps children develop their spatial and measurement skills.

dry rice and measuring (1)

I like putting magnet letters or numbers in a bowl of dry rice, and letting my youngest pull them out and practice identifying each one. All of my boys find it fun and a little calming to work the rice with their hands and let it spill through their stretched fingers (and it’s kind of calming for their mom, too).

magnet numbers in dry rice

Ideas for dry rice:

Empty 2 or 3 2-lb bags or Riceland rice in a bowl or tub small enough for rice to fill a third to one-half the container.

  • Toss in a couple of funnels, spoons, and a couple of measuring cups.
  • Hide large wooden beads in the rice and provide a string for children to lace each bead as they find it.
  • Squeeze liquid glue on a large print writing of their name. Have kids pinch the rice grains between their fingers and sprinkle it over the letters. Allow glue to dry and shake off the rest of the rice, revealing their name.

rhonda franz headshot

 

Rhonda Franz is an educator and mom of three boys. Her kids like a tub of dry rice almost much as they liking eating cooked rice. As a result of both these activities, her kitchen floors are rarely clean.

3 comments

    • Rhonda says:

      Dorothy, try it! Running my hands through a bowl full of dried rice is calming for me…something about the senses. I enjoyed the bowl in this photo as much as my boys did.

  1. Debbie says:

    The “rice tub” was probably the most popular center when I directed our church preschool. I’m not sure who enjoyed it more, the students or the teachers:!

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