As a family education, especially early education before the age of 3, parents should focus on sensory training. Sensory training includes visual, auditory, proprioceptive, tactile, and balance senses. It can be said that 0 to 3 years old is the period when children just develop their sensory abilities, and missing this period will be a lifelong regret. Today we will introduce you to several small methods of training at home, which are some of the training methods for normal babies. If the baby is at risk or has some problems, it is recommended to take the baby to a regular medical rehabilitation institution for training. A, visual training: black and white grid Visual training, mainly for the eyes to work properly. We need to first take out a square of white paper and draw it into a checkerboard grid. You can paint any few of the squares black, attract your baby’s attention through graphics or numbers, and let your baby count them for visual stimulation. Maybe she will count wrong, and reward that too, because our goal is to get baby to notice the difference between black and white, not to count the right numbers. After that, we can make the table bigger and the shapes more complex, and let the baby look at it for 1 minute and then draw the shapes by herself away from the original picture. In addition, more exposure to the natural environment, or see more bright, more “positive” colors, this real and strong contrast, beneficial to the perfection of vision. Second, auditory training: less noise and more listening I think the sense of hearing is the easiest to train, or listening to the good or bad is more of a habit formation. Lower the volume of the TV, and the volume of the couple’s quarrel, you can lower the child’s auditory threshold, greatly improving hearing. In addition, consciously exposing your baby to more different sounds can also promote the formation of his intellectual thinking. For example, listen to the sounds of nature, including the sounds of different objects. Third, proprioceptive training: dance movements proprioceptive, also known as kinesthetic. The command of the human body is the brain, the various parts of the body are his soldiers. The decision is wise, but also must be executed properly. Proprioception is a kind of “collective cohesion” is reflected. For example, some people tend to fall when walking and speak with a loud tongue, all of which are related to poor training of proprioception. In clinical practice, we use the most equipment such as “net cable stick” and “trampoline”. At home, we can take the child to do some children’s dance movements, if the child has some imitation behavior, we should give positive affirmation or guidance. Fourth, tactile training: the big dragon ball and kangaroo jump tactile, is very easy to ignore a sense, but it has a great impact on the child’s psyche. Children without tactile training will be more or less hyperactive tendencies in childhood. So how to do tactile training? We can buy a device called “big dragon ball”, is a plastic ball covered with “bumps”. You can let your baby touch this toy through various rewards, such as patting the ball in place, sitting on top of the ball, patting the ball and walking. When the baby is fully exposed to the “big dragon ball”, the tactile ability will naturally arise. In addition, there is a called “croquet”, can make the baby’s tactile training more rich and interesting. In addition, there is a movement called “kangaroo jump”, is also very good for training the sense of touch. You can find a cloth bag, let the baby stand in it, hands grab the side of the bag, so that people and the bag to form a whole, let the baby jump in one direction, and appropriate reward baby. V. Balance sense: walking along the line Balance sense, as the name implies, is to train children’s balance. In school will generally use balance beam, balance bridge, etc.. At home, parents can not choose such a professional and take up space equipment. No matter, as long as you draw a line on the ground, so that the baby according to your different requirements “walking” on the line. At first, you can let him walk a line, from point A to point B; then you can ask to bounce on one leg on the line, and then walk a section. When proficient, you can draw two lines or more, and let him “walk” on a different line. The five senses of sensory training is to lay a good foundation for future behavioral skills, to develop a good “execution” of the baby, but also an important part of the baby’s socialization. The early education before the age of 3 is mainly based on sensory training, parents can try these methods at home.