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How to Support Pediatric Speech Therapy at Home, Tips for Parents

When the lesson is over, speech therapy doesn’t end. In fact, some of the most important growth is made at home, when parents and kids are together doing normal things. Families can help their children learn to talk and improve the skills they’ve learned in therapy if they know what to do.

This book tells parents easy, doable things they can do to help their kids with speech therapy through routines, play, and good conversation.

Why help at home is important for speech therapy

Repetition and doing things in real life are the best ways for kids to learn. Speech therapy sessions give kids skilled help, but parent involvement in therapy helps them use their new skills regularly in places they are already familiar with.

Children often do the following when training techniques are practiced at home:

  • Move faster
  • Keep skills longer
  • Feel more comfortable talking to people
  • Avoid being as frustrated

Helping someone at home doesn’t have to be perfect; it just needs to be present, patient, and consistent.

How to Make Your Home Speech-Friendly

A speech-supportive home is one where people talk to each other easily all day long. Simple ways to talk to each other can make a big difference, like

  • Seeing each other when you talk
  • Clear and slowly speaking
  • Giving your kid time to answer
  • Adding to what your child has said

For instance, if your child says “car,” you could say, “Yes, a red car is going fast!” This shows how to use words without stress.

Speech Exercises at Home That Feel Like Play

To work on your speech, you don’t need papers or drills. You can do a lot of good speech exercises at home that you can fit into your daily life.

Some examples are

  • Putting names on things while eating or bathing
  • Building up sounds while reading books
  • Using the words over and over while playing
  • singing songs that have words that are repeated

Long meetings don’t work as well as short ones that happen often. Strong growth can be made in as little as five minutes at a time.

Using Language Games for Kids

Since kids learn best when they play, language games for kids are one of the best ways to help them improve their speech.

Play games like

  • “I Spy” to help you learn new words
  • Play make-believe with cars, dolls, or animals
  • Matching games help kids learn to name and describe things.
  • Board games where you take turns to start a chat

These games make learning fun while also getting kids to talk, listen, and use words in new ways.

Establishing Home Speech Practice Routines

Consistency is key. Creating a simple home speech practice routine helps children know what to expect and reduces resistance.

Some helpful speech routine tips are:

  • Getting ready every day at the same time
  • Keeping lessons short and good
  • Success at the end
  • Honoring hard work over perfection

Having a routine helps you feel more confident and makes practicing your speech a way of life.

At-Home Speech Tools Parents Can Use

Many effective at-home speech tools are already in your home. These may include:

  • Picture books
  • Flashcards or pictures you can print out
  • Toys that let you play make-believe
  • Mirrors to work on your sound
  • Apps that your child’s therapist says you should get

Make sure that the tools you use are in line with your speech therapist’s goals at all times.

Supporting Therapy Goals Between Sessions

One of the best ways parents can help is by supporting therapy goals directly. Ask your child’s speech therapist:

  • What sounds or skills to work on
  • How to make the right language models
  • How to use cues or hints
  • What you shouldn’t fix

Teamwork like this makes sure that treatment methods are used the same way in all situations.

Building Speech Confidence Through Encouragement

Being confident is a big part of being able to communicate well. building speech confidence means making sure they have a safe place to try, even if they make mistakes.

Boost confidence by:

  • Praise efforts instead of results
  • Not putting pressure on or correcting all the time
  • Not letting your child lead the talk
  • Having fun with small wins

A child who is sure of themselves is much more likely to talk easily and naturally get better.

Helping Speech Development in Everyday Situations

You don’t have to be serious when you practice speaking. Everyday tasks give us a lot of chances to learn:

  • Talk in the car
  • Describe what you do while cooking
  • While you play, ask open-ended questions.
  • Encourage telling stories before bed.

These times make English stronger naturally and help therapy progress.

Last Thoughts: You are very important to your child’s success.

One of the most important people in a child’s speech development is their parent(s). Through consistent parent involvement in therapy, intentional routines, and positive encouragement, you can make a lasting difference in your child’s progress.

With simple speech exercises at home, playful interaction, and ongoing collaboration with your child’s therapist, families help transform therapy goals into everyday communication success.

Remember that growth doesn’t need perfection if you ever feel unsure. All you need is love, patience, and consistency. Call 406.624.6669

Happy to talk to you!

Pediatric Therapy Clinic, Inc

602 East Park Ave.
Anaconda, MT 59711
Call: 406.563.0260
Fax: 406.259.1777

1801 Harrison Ave.
Butte, MT 59701

Other locations:

Bozeman

554 Pronghorn Trail, Ste A
Bozeman, MT 59718
Call: 406.624.6669
Fax: 406.259.1777

Billings

708 Broadwater Ave
Billings, MT 59101
Call: 406.259.1680
Fax: 406.259.1777

Karly

Speech Language Pathologist

Rooted in personal experience and ignited by her love for kids, Karly has been a speech-language pathologist since 2019. Karly completed her undergraduate degree in Psychology at Montana State University and went on to earn a Master’s in Communicative Sciences and Disorders at the University of Montana. Her final graduate internship brought her to Rady Children’s Hospital in San Diego where she stayed and expanded her clinical training for four years. A Montana native, Karly was thrilled to return to Bozeman to serve her community and empower individuals with communication differences and diverse learning styles. Karly enjoys working closely with families to provide home programming and education that promotes generalization of progress and confidence beyond the clinic   

Now Offering Speech Therapy!

Call 406.624.6669