Learn what hypo‑sensitivity means, why it happens in autism, and how simple naturalistic strategies can support young children’s regulation during everyday moments, with tips you can use immediately in this month’s video.
👉Watch the Quick Tip video
Children entered ESDM with a wide range of developmental profiles, and their progress reflected those starting points. Key findings included:
These findings reinforce that ESDM is effective across a wide range of profiles, but children’s early developmental skills shape how quickly they benefit.
For clinicians and families, this highlights the importance of:
Strengthening joint attention, imitation, and play early in intervention.
Supporting co‑regulation and reducing behavioral stressors so children can access learning opportunities.
Setting individualized expectations based on each child’s starting point rather than comparing progress across children.
Using early developmental assessments to guide goal‑setting and tailor intervention intensity.
Understanding predictors of ESDM response helps families and clinicians plan more confidently and compassionately. It shifts the focus from “How fast should a child progress?” to “What supports will help this child learn best?” The study underscores that meaningful progress is possible for every child — and that early cognitive and socio‑communication foundations play a powerful role in shaping each child’s unique learning pathway.
Empty paper towel and toilet paper rolls turn everyday moments into open‑ended invitations for curiosity, creativity, and shared discovery. This Play of the Month transforms a simple household item into a world of rolling, building, posting, pretending, and storytelling—meeting toddlers and preschoolers right where they are developmentally. With just a few cardboard tubes, play becomes a space for sensory exploration, early problem‑solving, flexible thinking, and those gentle moments of shared attention that strengthen relationships and communication. Whether families are rolling tubes down ramps, creating binoculars or telescopes, posting objects through the openings, or imagining the tubes as tunnels, animals, rockets, or characters, the focus stays on connection, curiosity, and co‑creating joyful experiences together.
See below for activity ideas and learning goals linked to the ESDM Curriculum Checklist items to help you discover the play level that best suits your child or the children and families you support in early learning environments.
Pay attention to what children like (or seem curious about) and follow their lead as long as you are a part of the action, too. Remember, the most important thing is for children to have fun doing this with you! Fun means engagement and that excites children's brains and bodies for meaningful learning to happen.
Simple Play (Sensorimotor & Exploratory)
These activities focus on cause-and-effect, sensory exploration, and basic motor skills—like banging, mouthing, or dropping—just to see what happens.
Roll & Chase — Roll the tube across the floor and pause to let the child follow or tap it.
Drop & Listen — Drop small items (pom‑poms, cotton balls, blocks) through the tube and listen for the sounds.
Peek‑Through Tube — Hold the tube up and peek through it together, taking turns looking and giggling.
Tap & Drum — Tap the tube on different surfaces (floor, pillow, table) to explore sounds.
Spin the Tube — Spin the tube on its side and watch how it moves and slows down.
Air Blowing — Blow gently through the tube to move light objects (feathers, cotton balls, tissue pieces).
Balance Beam — Place the tube on the floor and practice stepping over, around, or balancing objects on top.
Target Toss — Stand back and toss pom‑poms or cotton balls into upright tubes at different distances.
Combination Play (Functional & Constructive)
These activities involve using materials together with intention—building, matching, or organizing.
Posting Game — Post small objects (caps, pom‑poms, blocks) through the tube into a bowl or box.
Tube Ramp — Prop the tube on a couch cushion to make a ramp for cars, balls, or pom‑poms.
Build a Tunnel Path — Line up several tubes to make a pathway for cars or animals to travel through.
Sort & Match — Sort objects by size or color into different tubes.
Tube Stacking — Stack tubes vertically or horizontally to build simple structures.
Threading Ribbon or String — Pull a ribbon or scarf through the tube to explore cause‑and‑effect.
Stamping Patterns — Dip the tube ends in paint to make circles, flowers, or repeating patterns.
Marble Maze — Cut tubes in half lengthwise and tape them to cardboard to create a maze or run.
Matching — Write letters, numbers, or color dots on the paper‑roll tube, and give the child stickers with the same symbols to match. Garage‑sale color‑coding stickers work especially well.
Symbolic Play (Pretend & Representational)
These activities support imagination, role play, and storytelling.
Binoculars or Telescope — Tape two tubes together (or look through one), decorate it (use markers, stickers, glitter) and pretend to explore the room, look for animals, or go on a “safari.”
Rocket Ship — Pretend the tube is a rocket blasting off to different “planets” in the room. You can also decorate tubes with markers, foil, or paper fins, add a cone top, or put passengers inside.
Animal Voices — Turn the tube into a “voice changer” and make silly animal sounds.
Magic Wand — Tap the tube to “turn on” magic, wake up toys, or start a pretend adventure.
Character Tube — Add ears, wings, or legs and draw faces to decorate the tube as a person, animal, or creature and act out simple stories.
Tunnel for Tiny Friends — Pretend small toys are traveling through caves, tunnels, or secret passages.