If you’re on this page, it’s because you have one of our cool TherapyWorks fans. Where some may see only a piece of thick paper on a stick, we see endless possibilities!
Read below to check out some of the ways our therapists might use a fan just like the one we gave you to make therapy fun!
Write a different letter on multiple sticky notes and place them on the wall. Encourage your child to swat the letter that matches the sound you make.
Using a light grip, hold the fan about six inches away from your child’s mouth. Ask your child to blow softly and observe how the fan moves. The harder they blow, the more the fan tips back!
Give your child a sound (like “sh”) and send them on a scavenger hunt to find and swat items around the house that contain that sound.
Take turns adding to an imaginary story! Whoever is holding the fan has to add the next line.
Ask your child to hold the fan in one hand and “draw” different letters or shapes in the air.
Your child can trace the shape of the fan onto another piece of paper then decorate it however they’d like. Ask them to use scissors to cut out the fan shape then glue to attach it to the back of the fan.
Did you grab one of our balloons? Practice bouncing it back and forth like a tennis match! Make the game even trickier by trying to keep a balloon from falling only by waving the air below it.
Ask your child to copy your movements with the fan. Reach extra high, tap your knee, wave the fan fast and slow.
Check out your child’s understanding of various prepositions by asking them to hold the fan in different places. Over your head, between your knees, under your chin, beside your ear, and more!
Copy sight words onto sticky notes and place them on the wall. Read a simple story that contains many of their sight words, and ask them to swat the word on the wall that matches the word in the story.
Hide behind the fan and make a face that matches an emotion. Move the fan to the side and encourage your child to guess what emotion you’re showing. Then let them take a turn!
Call out a color and see how many items of that color your child can swat in ten seconds.