December—the month when classrooms smell like peppermint, students buzz with holiday energy, and teachers clutch their coffee mugs like Olympic torches—is one of the most magical yet overstimulating times in the entire school year.
Lights flash, bells jingle, glitter migrates into your hair, your bag, your car, and probably your future grandchildren’s closets. And while all of this excitement may feel festive, it can also be sensory overload central—especially for students with diverse needs.
But here’s the good news: with a little planning, a dash of creativity, and maybe a tiny bribe to your copy machine, you can create a December experience that is both joyful and sensory-friendly. Yes, it’s possible. Yes, you can still keep your holiday sparkle. And yes, your students can have a blast while feeling safe, calm, and supported.
So grab your cocoa, wrap yourself in a blanket like a wise winter wizard, and enjoy these December Sensory-Friendly Activities that’ll keep your students engaged, your classroom peaceful, and your sanity securely intact.
1. Warm “Snowball” Sensory Bins (No Actual Cold Fingers Required)
Snow is great… unless you’re someone who hates cold, has sensory sensitivities, or lives in a place where snow simply refuses to cooperate. Enter warm sensory snowballs, a cozy twist on the beloved sensory bin.
Use:
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Cotton balls
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Pom-poms
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Felt “snowflakes”
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White kinetic sand
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Large scoopers, tongs, spoons
Why it works: It provides tactile exploration without cold temperatures, melting puddles, or sudden shrieking because someone accidentally touched slush. Students can practice fine motor skills, sorting, scooping, and imaginative play.
Make it extra fun: Add small winter animals, treasure items, or jingle bells (the ones that won’t send a sound-sensitive student into orbit).
2. Calm Winter Forest Sensory Walk
No, you don’t need to build an actual forest in your classroom—though if you did, your principal would definitely remember you at evaluation time. A winter sensory walk is simple to set up and wonderfully calming.
Create “stations,” such as:
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Touch: Fake snow blanket, soft scarves, pinecones, or fuzzy mittens
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Smell: Peppermint, vanilla, cinnamon sticks (not too strong, we’re going for calm, not holiday candle store at the mall)
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Sight: Soft fairy lights, winter nature photos, snowflake shadows on walls
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Sound: Gentle wind chimes, nature sounds, soft instrumental holiday music
Keep it slow, quiet, and soothing. Students can rotate one at a time or in small groups to avoid overstimulation.
Bonus tip: Put a “forest ranger hat” on a stuffed animal and let them “lead” the walk. Instant charm.
3. Silent Night Art Session (Because December Is Loud Enough Already)
The holiday season tends to be… well… loud. This activity gives students the chance to create while embracing quiet, calm, peaceful vibes.
Provide:
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Black paper
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White crayons, chalk, or paint pens
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Stickers, sequins (optional, depending on sensory needs)
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Stencils for stars, snowflakes, winter shapes
Play no music, soft music, or nature ambience depending on student preference.
This activity is perfect for students who need:
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Reduced auditory input
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Predictable, non-messy materials
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Opportunities for focused creativity
Bonus humor: Tell students you’re all becoming “December ninjas of peace.” They’ll immediately buy in because ninjas are always cool.
4. Gingerbread Playdough Lab (Smells Like Fun… Without the Sugar Crash)
If you want your classroom to smell like warm gingerbread without unleashing a sugary chaos wave, homemade gingerbread-scented playdough is your best friend.
Ingredients (easy and gluten-free options available):
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Cinnamon
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Ginger
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Brown food coloring
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Your favorite playdough recipe
Students can:
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Roll and press shapes
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Use cookie cutters
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Build gingerbread people or houses
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Create patterns
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Strengthen fine motor skills
Important note: Inform students that nothing is edible. You think they know that—
But experience says otherwise.
5. Sensory-Friendly Holiday Movie Corner
Lots of December movies are… intense. Bright lights, fast scenes, dramatic holiday music that feels like it’s trying to climb inside your soul. So instead, curate a sensory-safe viewing corner.
Choose movies or shorts that are:
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Low-intensity
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Softly colored
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Slow-paced
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Gentle in sound and storyline
Use options like:
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The Snowman
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Kipper: Christmas Eve
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Little Bear Winter Stories
Add:
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Weighted blankets
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Noise-cancelling headphones
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Soft seating or beanbags
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Dim lighting
And voilà—your classroom becomes a peaceful winter retreat instead of a sensory battlefield.
6. Cozy Hot Cocoa Station (Sensory Version!)
Don’t worry—there’s no actual hot liquid involved unless you’re feeling brave.
Instead, create a pretend-play cocoa station for sensory exploration:
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Brown rice or beans for “cocoa mix”
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Cotton balls for marshmallows
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Scoops, cups, ladles
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Cinnamon sticks for smell
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Picture visuals for sequencing
Skills supported:
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Sequencing (“first scoop, then stir…”)
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Role-play
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Fine motor skills
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Social communication
It’s adorable, practical, and completely spill-proof.
7. December Yoga & Stretching: The “Melted Snowman” Routine
December is full of excitement, which means students often need movement breaks—but calming ones.
Try a winter-themed yoga routine:
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“Snowflake Float”: Gentle arm stretches
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“Reindeer Reach”: Side bends
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“Frozen Mountain”: Still, grounded stance
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“Melted Snowman”: Relaxed lying pose
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“Icicle Stretch”: Reach high, then slowly drop arms
This supports:
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Self-regulation
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Proprioceptive input
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Mind-body awareness
Plus, watching kids dramatically “melt” like snowmen? Comedy gold.
8. Winter Texture Tiles: A DIY Sensory Board
Create a board or tray filled with different winter textures:
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Felt (scarves)
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Cotton (snow)
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Sandpaper (ice surfaces)
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Faux fur (winter hats)
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Scratchy ribbon (mittens)
Students can explore at their own pace and comfort level. The board can be:
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Travel-sized for calming corners
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Used during transitions
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A grounding tool for students needing sensory breaks
Pro tip: Avoid glitter unless you want to find sparkles in your lunch for the next six months.
9. Inclusive Holiday “Choice Day” Activity Bins
Not every student wants, likes, or can tolerate the same type of activity. The fix? Offer choice bins with sensory-friendly December themes.
Examples include:
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Winter LEGO Bin (blue, white, silver bricks)
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Calm Coloring Bin (simple outlines, winter animals)
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Quiet Puzzle Bin (snow scenes, mittens, penguins)
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Tactile Bin (soft balls, rubber snowflakes, calm fidgets)
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STEM Bin (building sleds, snowball launchers using paper cups and cotton balls)
Choice empowers students, supports autonomy, and reduces behavioral overwhelm.
10. Sensory-Safe Classroom Décor (Yes, Minimalism Counts as a Holiday Theme)
While Pinterest says your classroom should resemble Santa’s workshop, sensory considerations say: Maybe chill a little.
Swap:
❌ Flashing lights
❌ Loud bells
❌ Overloaded bulletin boards
❌ Strong scents
For:
✔ Soft colors
✔ Gentle lighting
✔ Natural, calm décor
✔ A single theme (winter animals, forest, snowflakes)
Your students will feel calmer.
You will feel calmer.
Even your custodians will be grateful.
11. December Social Stories: “What Happens When School Feels Different?”
Changes in schedule, routine, and classroom environment can trigger anxiety for many students with diverse needs. Create December-themed social stories that explain:
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Holiday schedule changes
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Behavior expectations during events
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What to do during overstimulation
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How to ask for breaks
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Why some decorations are different
Use calming visuals, simple language, and a supportive tone.
Add humor—“If something is too loud, we can quietly tell a teacher. We do not scream, run, or try to hide inside the supply cabinet like a ninja elf.”
12. Build-Your-Own Snowflake Station (The No-Mess Upgrade)
Instead of glitter explosions and sticky glue disasters, use:
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Felt snowflake shapes
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Velcro dots
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Foam shapes
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Magnetic snowflake pieces
Students can build, rebuild, and reorganize snowflakes endlessly without any mess, dryness, or sticky mishaps.
Bonus: It’s great for students working on:
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Fine-motor skills
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Bilateral coordination
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Pattern recognition
13. Winter Sensory Escape Corner:“The North Pole Zen Zone”
Every classroom deserves a dedicated safe space, especially in December. Create a winter-themed calming corner featuring:
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Soft blue or white lights
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White noise or winter wind ambience
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Weighted lap pads
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Soft stuffed winter animals
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Visual calm-down cards
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Warm-texture fabrics
This becomes a place for students to reset, decompress, or escape the hustle and bustle.
Teacher perk: You might want to sit there yourself during lunch.
14. Sensory-Friendly December Crafts That Don’t Trigger Anxiety (or Require a Hazmat Suit)
Offer simple, predictable crafts such as:
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Paper strip candy canes
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Dot-marker snowmen
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Cotton ball snow scenes
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Sticker-based winter art
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Tissue paper trees (pre-cut pieces)
These avoid:
❌ Glue explosions
❌ Loud tearing
❌ Messy paint
❌ Strong smells
Crafting becomes fun again—maybe even relaxing.
15. Celebrate ALL Students: “My December Strengths” Mini-Project
December often becomes holiday-heavy, leaving out students who celebrate differently—or not at all. Instead, focus on something inclusive and empowering: a strength-based winter project.
Have students identify and decorate a “December Strength Badge,” such as:
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“Winter Problem Solver”
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“Calm Snowflake Listener”
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“Kindness Penguin”
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“Brave Reindeer Learner”
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“Super Snow Scientist”
Display them proudly.
Celebrate who they are.
Create a positive, inclusive atmosphere.
Everyone wins.
Final Thoughts: Sensory-Friendly December = Magical December
You don’t need tinsel explosions, flashing lights, or a soundtrack of nonstop jingling to create a memorable December experience for your students. What they truly need is what they need all year long:
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Safety
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Predictability
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Comfort
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Choices
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Understanding
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And an environment where their sensory systems can breathe
By offering sensory-friendly activities, you give your students the gift of connection, peace, and joy—without overstimulation, meltdowns, or peppermint-scented chaos.
And best of all?
You can enjoy a calmer December too.
Now go forth, brave educator, and create the warmest, most inclusive, sensory-friendly winter wonderland your students have ever experienced.
Some really great, useful ideas, thanks for sharing.