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Move the Fun Indoors to Practice Speech & Language Skills During Winter

Is it a chilly January where you are? Is there snow on the ground and have the leaves fallen off the trees? If the answer to these questions is yes, then it’s officially the time to move play inside and find fun ways to keep the kids busy and entertained in the living room. While you do that, you can encourage your child's speech and language development with these indoor activities.


winter speech therapy

Who Doesn't Love an Obstacle Course

Use the couch cushions to make a tunnel, and blankets and pillows can be a path from one room to another. Hide items inside the tunnels, put a treat into a plastic Tupperware container and get the kids moving!


How to Target Speech or Language Goals?


  1. Give verbal directions that are as complex as your child understands: Hop on the blanket like a bunny, slither like a snake through the tunnel.

  2. Give clues for hidden items to target sounds: I'm thinking of something that we drive and makes a vroom sound (/k/ sound for "car"); Where is the animal that makes a "woof woof" sound (/d/ sound for "dog")

  3. Find the hidden treats and ask for help: did you put a cookie in a closed and see through container, have your toddler who is working on single words find it and ask for help such as: "open" or "help." Kids working on 2 words can say: "open please" or "mommy help."

Get winter speech therapy practice ideas

Winter speech therapy for children

Play Simon (or Daddy) Says

This is a classic that has been around forever since we all like to give directions! Here is how you can target different language goals:


  1. Give 1 or 2-step directions: touch your nose; or touch your nose then jump up and down. You can make these as complex as you like. For example: touch your nose after you jump two times up and down. The addition of the words "after" and "two times" makes it harder for kids to work on more complex comprehension skills.

  2. Target vocabulary: have your child touch their nose, cheeks, and knees. You can also target other object vocabularies you have around them like having them touch or grab a ball or shoe. This can be made complex as well by giving clues: touch the thing we put on our feet before we go outside, or touch the green jacket not the red one.

Make Something to Eat

Is it snack time? Making a meal or a snack is a great opportunity to listen to and use language. You can also practice sharing the finished meal with loved ones. Here is one snack easy enough for the little ones to make with minimal help. You can target:


  1. Describing: What do the ingredients feel/look/smell/taste like? Fuzzy kiwis, round apples, smelly broccoli and sour lemons. There are so many ways to talk about the food we eat. This is a great way to expand vocabulary.

  2. Taking Turns: Is your child practicing taking turns? You can say "my turn" and "your turn" while pointing to you or your child. And take turns adding ingredients to the bowl or taking bites from the snack you made.

  3. Asking for More: Is your toddler working on saying "more?" You can put the snack just out of reach and have your child sign/grunt/point/ask for "more" depending on their level of language skills.


You can tweak these activities to target any speech or language goal. Just ask your online speech therapist to modify the suggestions we have here. Our Better Speech SLPs are always giving clients homework to work on their goals and showing them how to practice with these types of activities.


At Better Speech, we offer online speech therapy services convenient for you and tailored to your child's individual needs. Our services are affordable and effective - get Better Speech now.

 

About the Author

Cheri Gipson


I am a speech-language pathologist who specializes in language skills and pronunciation. I obtained my Master’s of Science degree in Speech-Language Pathology from Western Illinois University and I have worked in the field of speech pathology for over 20 years. One of the things I enjoy most is helping people learn.


In my spare time, I enjoy writing tips on how to improve online teaching for both the larger language schools and also as a private ESL teacher. Teaching is my passion, and I love seeing students make progress. Every day is a new adventure, and I am grateful for the opportunity to help people learn and grow!

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