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Individualized Programs

SENSORYLAND now offers individualized programs designed to support regulation, daily living skills, and developmental growth at home for children who are sensory-sensitive, sensory-seeking, neurodivergent, or developmentally delayed.​

Each program is customized to your child’s sensory needs, developmental level, and daily routines, helping families feel confident implementing strategies that actually work in real life.

For $120, your program includes:

- An initial 45-minute video consultation to review needs and build your child’s personalized plan (based on your chosen area of focus - refer to our individualized program page for our specific programs)
- Monthly follow-up support for up to 3 months via phone or video to adjust strategies, troubleshoot challenges, and support your child’s progress.
- 50+ pages of customized activities and strategies aligned with your child’s strengths and challenges
- Flexible, family-friendly strategies that require minimal prep

Each program is designed to be flexible, supportive, and developmentally appropriate, meeting your child where they are while gently encouraging growth—one step at a time.

 

Download the free Road Maps here.

Start building your child’s personalized program here.

Explore our Roadmaps

Sensory Roadmap for the Sensitive Child

Does your child cover their ears with everyday sounds? Avoid certain clothing textures, foods, or messy play? Become overwhelmed in busy or noisy environments? The Sensory Sensitive Child Roadmap is designed to help parents understand why these reactions happen and how to support their child through daily routines. This roadmap walks you step-by-step through identifying sensory triggers, observing patterns across activities, and using gentle, supportive strategies to build regulation and participation—without overwhelm. You’ll learn how to adjust the environment, respond to behaviors with the right level of support, and introduce new experiences using a “just right challenge” approach that honors your child’s sensory needs and developmental level.

Sensory Roadmap for the Avoidant Child

Does your child pull away from touch, avoid movement, resist grooming tasks, or refuse activities that feel unpredictable or uncomfortable? The Sensory Avoidant Child Roadmap supports children who consistently try to escape or avoid sensory input that feels too intense. This roadmap helps parents recognize avoidant behaviors as communication—not defiance—and provides practical tools to reduce distress while gently expanding tolerance. You’ll learn how to create safe, predictable routines, adapt environments, and introduce sensory input gradually so your child can participate with confidence and support, at their own pace.

Sensory Roadmap for the Seeking Child

Does your child constantly move, crash, jump, chew, or touch everything? Seek strong movement, pressure, or sound? Struggle to slow their body down? The Sensory Seeking Child Roadmap is designed to help parents understand sensory-seeking behaviors and channel them in supportive, functional ways. This roadmap focuses on meeting your child’s sensory needs intentionally so they can stay regulated, engaged, and ready to participate in daily routines. You’ll learn how to build structured sensory input into the day, support body awareness, and use proactive strategies that help your child feel organized rather than overstimulated—while still honoring their developmental needs.

Pre-Writing Skills Roadmap

Does your child struggle with hand strength, grasp, or control when drawing or coloring? Avoid fine motor tasks or fatigue quickly? The Prewriting Skills Roadmap supports the foundational skills needed for handwriting success. This roadmap focuses on building strength, coordination, and motor planning before formal writing begins. You’ll learn how to develop hand strength, grasp patterns, and controlled movements through play-based activities—helping your child feel confident and prepared for writing tasks without pressure.

Letter Formation Roadmap

Does your child form letters inconsistently, start letters in the wrong place, or reverse strokes? Do they struggle to remember how letters are made? The Letter Formation Roadmap helps parents support correct letter formation through developmentally appropriate strategies. This roadmap focuses on motor planning, stroke sequence, and repetition in meaningful ways. You’ll learn how to break down letter formation into manageable steps, use multisensory strategies, and build consistency—supporting clearer writing and improved confidence.

Letter Sizing Roadmap

Does your child write letters that are too big, too small, or inconsistent in size? Do they struggle to keep letters within lines? The Letter Sizing Roadmap supports visual-motor and spatial awareness skills needed for appropriately sized writing. This roadmap focuses on understanding letter proportions and spatial boundaries. You’ll learn how to use visual supports, hands-on activities, and graded practice to help your child develop size awareness—leading to more readable and organized writing.

Letter Placement Roadmap

Does your child have difficulty placing letters on the line or keeping writing aligned? Do letters float or dip below the line? The Letter Placement Roadmap helps parents support spatial awareness and visual-motor integration related to writing alignment. This roadmap focuses on body awareness, visual cues, and consistent practice. You’ll learn strategies to help your child understand where letters belong—improving clarity, legibility, and overall writing organization.

Writing Words to Sentences Roadmap

Does your child struggle to move from writing single words to full sentences? Become overwhelmed by spacing, punctuation, or organizing ideas? The Writing Words to Sentences Roadmap supports the transition from basic writing to more complex expression. This roadmap focuses on motor endurance, visual organization, and language planning. You’ll learn how to scaffold writing tasks, reduce cognitive load, and support your child in building complete sentences—helping writing feel manageable and successful.

Scissor Skills Roadmap

Does your child struggle to hold scissors, cut along lines, or coordinate both hands? Avoid cutting tasks altogether? The Scissors Skills Roadmap supports the foundational skills needed for safe and effective cutting. This roadmap focuses on hand strength, bilateral coordination, and visual-motor integration. You’ll learn how to break down cutting skills step by step, use adaptive tools, and build confidence through gradual practice—supporting fine motor development and classroom readiness.

Independent Dressing Roadmap

Does your child struggle with clothing orientation, fasteners, or sequencing dressing steps? Become overwhelmed or avoid dressing routines? The Independent Dressing Roadmap helps parents support dressing as a functional life skill. This roadmap focuses on coordination, motor planning, sensory considerations, and routine building. You’ll learn how to practice skills off the body, reduce distractions, create predictable routines, and accommodate sensory needs—supporting independence and confidence in daily dressing tasks.

Feeding and Mealtime Participation Roadmap

Does your child struggle to sit at the table, tolerate foods nearby, or participate in family meals? Become overwhelmed by mealtime expectations? The Feeding & Mealtime Participation Roadmap supports sensory regulation and participation during meals. This roadmap focuses on building comfort, predictability, and positive mealtime experiences. You’ll learn how to adjust the environment, reduce pressure, and support regulation—helping your child engage at their own pace while building consistency and confidence.

Sensory Feeding Challenges Roadmap

Does your child avoid foods based on texture, smell, or temperature? Gag, pocket food, or eat a very limited variety? The Feeding Challenges Roadmap helps parents understand sensory-based feeding difficulties and how to support progress without force. This roadmap focuses on sensory tolerance, gradual exposure, and functional participation. You’ll learn how to identify sensory patterns, reduce overwhelm, and introduce new foods in manageable steps—supporting safety, regulation, and long-term feeding success.

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