Monday 11 July 2016

5 essential pre-verbal skills parents and professionals need to know about for early communication

The learning of a young child’s first word is an exciting moment for both parents and professionals, and especially so for those with communication difficulties. There are many skills which precede the acquisition of language, and for those with special needs, it may take a little longer to get there. 



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It can be disheartening for parents waiting for the first words, but a little knowledge of pre-verbal skills and their importance in laying the foundations for later speech and language can help to set small learning goals and recognise progress in communication before language takes off.

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1. Eye contact is needed to maintain social interaction between two people, and communication can break down if eye contact is only fleeting . It can be encouraged through everyday interactions such as waiting for eye contact before giving children something they want, or setting up motivating activities such as blowing bubbles or peep-po games.



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2. Attention is needed to understand language and concentrate on one activity. Children with communication difficulties may have a short attention span but this can be developed through playing with the same toy in a variety of ways such as building towers with bricks, lining them up to make trains, playing peep-po games, hiding bricks, making animals or people, making shapes and patterns.


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3. Breath control is needed to control the use of breath combined with mouth movements in producing speech, and those with speech and communication difficulties may have poor control of the muscles used for speech. Breath control can be improved through blowing games such as blowing on the hair or the skin, blowing bubbles in the water or on the hair.


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4. Copying is needed to observe or imitate speech or signs, but some children with communication difficulties may be engrossed in their own world. Copying can be encouraged by playing alongside children and joining in everyday routines, as well as fun and easy activities such as copying funny faces and sounds in the mirror.





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5. Turn taking is needed for understanding of the rules of conversational turn taking. If two people talk at once, communication can break down. Games such as rolling balls and wind up toys to and fro can help encourage turn taking as well as everyday turn taking and sharing with siblings.


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Over 100 fun and practical activities to encourage pre-verbal skills and early communication can be found in the third edition of the popular resource ‘early Communication Skills’ by Charlotte Lynch and Julia Kidd.


- Charlotte Lynch 
Speechmark author early Communication Skills 3e


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