

Greeting Choice Cards
A few simple hello cards give your child a clear way to choose a greeting, try it once, and reset without surprise touch.
Play ideas for toddlers who do best with predictable, visual, low-language routines. These activities favor clear starts and finishes, repeatable steps, simple materials, and flexible sensory input. They are everyday play ideas, not autism therapy or diagnostic guidance.


A few simple hello cards give your child a clear way to choose a greeting, try it once, and reset without surprise touch.


A shallow ocean bin lets your child pour a little water, watch the scene change, and stop before the play gets too wild.


This toy-first pretend x-ray game gives your child one short picture loop, one visible done move, and an easy place to stop.


A simple squeeze-and-drop game where your child feeds small objects into a tennis-ball mouth one at a time.


A few action cards and a finished container turn simple movement into a short, visual game with a clear ending each turn.


One toy phone and one quick hello give toddlers an easy first pretend-play routine they can copy right away.


A short visual play routine where your child makes a toy copy the picture on each card and then drops the finished card into a container.


Put out a few favorite toys, point to one, and let your child get it and bring it back in a short shared-attention loop.


A short left-to-right row of Mega Blocks gives your child one simple job: stack the next block onto the tower.


Your child checks a stuffed animal with one doctor tool, marks the step done, and resets the tool for another calm turn.


Hide 1 tiny prize under a cup, point to the right spot, and let your child lift to find it in a fast shared-attention loop.


One tiny foam puff becomes a clap-open-clean loop that keeps the sensory play small.


Pack brown sugar into a small cup, reveal a tiny castle, add a figure, crush it, and rebuild from the same tray.


One pale crayon, one simple outline, and a done spot make coloring easier to enter and easier to end.


One blanket turns peekaboo into a short hide, reveal, and repeat routine.


Carry water, sprinkle a few plants, and use the empty clear container as the signal to walk back.


A low-language picture choice game where your child picks a toy by pointing to, pulling, or handing over one picture.


Put a small pile of dry clothes by the washer and let your child load them in one easy turn at a time.


A tiny doll-care routine turns feeding, burping, and bedtime into easy repeatable pretend play.


Your child squeezes, lifts, and drops cooked coloured spaghetti in one clear, repeatable sensory loop.


A simple visual routine where your child uses a picture to request one egg and drops it into a clear finished container.


A scoop, two containers, and soft pom poms make a simple transfer activity with an easy reset.


A calm table activity where your child sorts picture cards into visible category groups until the small stack is done.


A calm visual game where your child picks a card and moves one toy animal along a short path to the finish.