Speech Therapy at Home:
Simple Activities for Improving Speech at Home

If you’re wondering how you can improve your child’s speech and language skills at home, you’ve come to the right place!  If you suspect that your child has a speech or language delay, the first thing you should do is to contact a speech-language pathologist (SLP) in your area.  The best way to find an SLP is to contact your local public schools.  In the United States, the public schools serve children with speech and language delays as young as three years of age and their services are absolutely free.

Unfortunately, the evaluation process can take a few months and some children may not qualify at all.  Even when a child is enrolled in speech therapy, home practice can increase the effectiveness of that therapy.  For these reasons, parents are often interested in ways they can do speech therapy at home.

The following contains ideas of how you can help your child be understood better as well as improve their use of language to communicate with others in a more effective way.  This advice should not replace a consultation with a speech-language pathologist and you should always follow your SLP’s advice on the best ways to improve your child’s skills.

In order to know how you can do speech therapy at home, it is important to understand how a speech-language pathologist would work with your child.  Let’s take a look:

speech therapy kits for home practice

Speech Therapy Kits for Home Practice

No-Prep Worksheets for Teaching Speech and Language Skills

Speech Therapy at Home Step One:
Assessment

What the SLP Will Do:

First, the SLP will do an assessment of your child, which will include looking at all areas of speech and language development to see which areas your child is delayed in.  They decide this by comparing your child’s performance to developmental norms.  This means, what typically developing children are able to do at that age.

What You Can Do for Speech Therapy At Home:

Look to see what communication skills your child should have at their age.  We have written about this on our website here.

These guides summarize the current research about what typically developing children are generally able to do at certain ages.  This will give you an idea of what skills your child may need extra teaching in and give you a place to start.


Speech Therapy at Home Step Two:
Choosing Goals:

What the SLP Will Do:

Next, the SLP will choose a few of these problem areas to work on at a time.  Many times, children with speech and language difficulties have problems with several areas.  It is important when you begin therapy to select a reasonable number of goals to address at first.  The SLP will typically choose these based on which problems are affecting communication the most, or which skills are typically developed the earliest.  For example, if a child is only able to speak a few words but also has trouble with the /s/ sound, the speech therapist will choose to teach him/her more words before beginning to address specific sounds.

What You Can Do for Speech Therapy At Home: 

Choose 2-3 of your child’s areas of weakness to address.  The best way to choose targets for parents is to pick what’s affecting your child and your family the most.  For example, if your child has a lot to say but no one can understand him because of sound errors, you could pick a few speech sounds to work on.  Or, if your child has difficulty following directions and it is interfering with your daily routine and family life, you may want to start there.  Try to avoid choosing goals that the milestones guide above says are well above your child’s age level or far away from what he’s currently able to do, but really anything you choose to work on with your child for speech therapy at home will do him/her good.


Speech Therapy at Home Step Three:
Providing Therapy

What the SLP Will Do:

Your child’s speech therapist will be trained on the best therapy methods available for each type of disorder and delay.  All SLPs must take part in continuing education opportunities that will advise them of what the research is saying about various therapy techniques.  Each child is different and will respond to different therapy methods.  The SLP’s job is to choose the right therapy technique for each child and to adapt therapy when the child does or does not respond to a specific technique.

What You Can Do for Speech Therapy At Home: 

This is the part where I tell you that it is very important to be working with a speech-language pathologist so they can choose the therapy approach that will work best for your child.  After all, that’s why they have a Master’s Degree!  But there are some basic approaches that you can try during speech therapy at home to help your child.  The idea is simple: break each skill down into smaller or simpler pieces and specifically teach them to your child.  For example, if you want to teach your child to use the /f/ sound correctly in conversation, you can start by teaching your child how to say the sound by itself (“fffffff”), then in syllables (“fuh”, “oof”), then words (“fish”, “roof”), and then begin putting those words in sentences and conversation.  Or, if you want to teach your child how to follow multi-step directions, you could start with very basic short directions with a picture cue (like “sit”, “stand up”, “come here”) and gradually work your way up to more complex directions and putting two or three-step directions together.

If this sounds complicated, don’t worry!  You can do this!  You just need to get into the mindset of breaking skills down into smaller pieces.  Check out some of our other articles or head over to the weekly speech and language tips and find some ideas of how you can work on various skills at home.

speech therapy kits for home practice

Speech Therapy Kits for Home Practice

No-Prep Worksheets for Teaching Speech and Language Skills

Carrie Clark, Speech-Language Pathologist

About the Author: Carrie Clark, MA CCC-SLP

Hi, I’m Carrie! I’m a speech-language pathologist from Columbia, Missouri, USA. I’ve worked with children and teenagers of all ages in schools, preschools, and even my own private practice. I love digging through the research on speech and language topics and breaking it down into step-by-step plans for my followers.

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