Is your child late in talking, here's 10 doctors' advice to help him?

Parents often ask what they can do to help their child at home to enhance social and linguistic skills. In fact, you should not think of this as a double job, especially you mothers. Instead, you may look for ways to include them in your baby routine [...]
Parents often ask what they can do to help their child at home to enhance social and linguistic skills.
In fact, you should not think of this as a double job, especially you mothers. Instead, you may look for ways to include them in your baby routine and in your daily interactions in games.
Here you have a list of proven and true counsel that helps to develop the language and social development of your children. You might use these suggestions for children who may usually have a delay in speaking.
1. Give Positive Praisesespecially when your child immediately follows the instructions you give, when you say what you say, or when it demonstrates skills and social behavior.
2. Use a language as easy as possible for him and a lot of expressive. Help your child increase his vocabulary by enriching him with phrases they say, by speaking through their activities, and by asking them questions when reading books or performing tasks in order to develop conversations.
3. Be visual. Try to make everything you teach your child evident in order to see or do something physical. Google images can help you show them what you want. When a child cannot imagine a new word you are saying, explain it with images.
4. Give an example of proper conduct. When your child uses wrong grammar or incomplete sentences, mold the word again using the proper structure of the sentence. Emphasize the error of your written word, and show your child how to say it instead of what it says.
5. Make your child repeat the instructions behind you. So you'll make sure they understand exactly what you expect and allow them to ask any questions.
6. Ask open questions. So your child will be able to practice language habits with longer answers. So ask your child about what he learned in kindergarten or school, or await his comments on a certain book or film.
7. Read, read, read. Stop at each page and discuss with your child what you have read. Ask your child about the event (who, what, when, where, why) to talk about what is happening in history. Also, ask questions about what might happen next and talk about the emotions / feelings of characters in history. You can also discuss the problems of the characters in the story and what they can do to correct them.
8. Use pictures to practice sentence formation. Look at the pictures in the books and get your child to create a complete and grammatically correct sentence for each picture he sees. If the sentences are short, help them to think about ways of expansion and to make the longest and more complicated sentence.
9. First Get Their Attention. Instead of saying child “Go get your toys”, you better buy some time by saying “You can go get your toys”
10. Create games. Play language games to practice at home.










