Involve Your Family in Your Childâs Speech Development
Jul 23, 2024 Speech therapy is never done inside a vacuum, and it takes a village to help your child through their communication journey.
Speech therapy is never done inside a vacuum. Besides contacting a speech and language pathologist (SLP), it takes a village to help your child through their communication journey. While your childâs speech therapy sessions are of the utmost importance, so too is their therapy practice at home. Just remember that this practice is âaddedâ and that it shouldnât replace your childâs speech therapy sessions entirely.
If youâd like your child to make fast progress, then get your family involved and supportive of the speech therapy process. In fact, studies have shown that children with highly involved families generally move through speech therapy more quickly.
Hereâs How You and Your Family Members Can Help
1. Respond positively
Be sure to keep your family in the loop about your childâs speech therapy progress. So, you can encourage them to be positive and receptive when your child puts their new communication skills to use. Praise goes a long way in building both your childâs communication skills and self-esteem.
2. Do activities that your family feels are important to them
Itâs possible that your mother prefers practicing with your child using flashcards, while your father prefers to use the Speech Blubs app. You know your family and their system best. So encourage your family members to use their unique preferences and contexts to help your child with their communication development.
3. Encourage communication creativity
Help your family understand that there are various forms and modes of communication which your child engages with differently. For example, maybe your child just isnât remembering the flashcard vocabulary related to farm animals. Ask their aunt or uncle to take them to a local farm and learn the names of the animals there. Engaging the senses and physically seeing things often helps children remember names and their various associations.
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4. Prioritize pictures
Speech therapists will usually work with sound flashcards (for articulation) and themed vocabulary pictures (for language). Ask your childâs speech therapist for copies of these cards, pictures, and vocabulary. Send them out to your family members to subtly do therapy with your child by using those words without them even realizing it! You could even send short videos of therapy sessions, demonstrating how the cards, pictures, and vocabulary can be used in meaningful activities.
5. Donât push
Some family members may not want to get involved, and thatâs okay! Theyâll have a reason for not wanting to be âhands-onâ and can help you and your child in other ways. Itâs important to respect the priorities and needs of your family members as well.
6. Use natural settings
Speech therapy is most effective when it takes place in a childâs natural environment. So, encourage your family to follow your lead and make sure they engage your child in therapy activities as naturally as possible. By doing this, your family members will develop meaningful learning opportunities for your child, as well as provide them with information and different teaching strategies.
7. Maintain home habits
Itâs important children stick to their routine regardless of whether they spend time with you or a family member. Structured routines help children feel more secure and also make good activity markers that show when an activity should and shouldnât take place. For example, eating dinner too late not only disrupts eating-related language learning but is likely to eliminate bath time-related language learning as well.
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8. Use âWeâ language for the correct mindset
Letâs be honest, the minute someone gives you a correction that starts with the word âYou,â finger-pointing causes our defenses to go up, and conflict is likely to follow. Laying blame doesnât do yourself, your child, or your family any favors. Youâre all in this together.
Use the âWeâ mindset, so your family will feel part of the team, not like a General who is out to get them. For example, âWe were off the mark with that oneâ sounds a whole lot better than, âYou were off the mark with that one.â
9. Take things slowly
Oftentimes, families feel that itâs their responsibility to make a difference and help you âfixâ your child. While this is nice, itâs not realistic to expect that your child is going to achieve speech therapy progress quickly. Take things slowly so that they interact calmly and help them with their speech therapy in small, meaningful ways.
10. Listen to their concerns
Nobody likes a âknow-it-all,â but family members often make interesting observations and have valuable points that theyâd like to share with you. Let them know that you take them seriously and that their concerns are your concerns. Making sure you, your family, and your childâs speech therapist are all on the same page is extremely important for your child to be well-cared-for in their communication development.
11. Respond positively (again)
This time itâs you who need to respond positively to family members when they try with your child and attempt speech therapy-related activities. Good interaction skills and encouragement goes a long way. Positivity increases communication and the desire for your family member to keep going with your childâs communication activities.
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Parting Words
The more your child practices their speech therapy, the more likely they are to make significant strides in their communication abilities. Commitment and involvement from parents and family can be the turning point in the development of your childâs communication skills. Helping your child communicate can be frustrating at first, but stick with it, and youâll surely be happy with the result.
Remember that you always have an ally with Speech Blubs. If you arenât sure which activities your family members can do with your child, then download Speech Blubs. Help stimulate your child and target their communication using some of our fantastic communication-centered activities. Contact us for additional support if youâre not sure what your next steps should be.