How to Support Your Child's Language Development at Home
By Ema Bartolo ·
You do not need to be a speech therapist to make a real difference to your child’s language development. Parents serve as their child’s most important language teachers. Everyday interactions — during meals, bath time, car journeys, and neighbourhood walks — are where language learning happens most naturally.
Talk Throughout the Day
- Self-talk: Describe your own actions aloud
- Parallel talk: Narrate what your child is doing
- Use both languages naturally: In Malta’s bilingual context, alternate between Maltese and English as feels natural
Follow Your Child’s Lead
Children learn language best when interested and engaged. Rather than directing attention to your chosen focus, observe your child’s interests and discuss those.
- Watch and wait: Observe interests, then narrate them
- Get on their level: Position yourself at eye level during play
- Let them lead: Join their games without taking over
Expand on What Your Child Says
When your child communicates, add to it through “expansion” — one of the most powerful language-building techniques:
- Child says “car” — You say “Yes, a big red car!”
- Child says “doggy gone” — You say “The doggy has gone home”
- Child says “more” — You say “You want more pasta? Here’s more pasta”
This models slightly more complex language without correcting, teaching vocabulary and grammar naturally.
Read Together Every Day
Shared book reading supports language development significantly. Even 10 minutes daily makes a difference.
- Talk about pictures rather than reading every word
- Ask open questions to encourage predictions and observations
- Repeat favourite books — repetition helps children learn new words
- Use both languages — Maltese and English books support bilingual development
Create Communication Opportunities
- Pause and wait: Give your child chances to point, gesture, or use words before providing items
- Offer choices: “Do you want the apple or the banana?” encourages naming preferences
- Put favourite toys out of reach: Creates natural reasons to request help
- Do unexpected things: Surprising behaviours prompt reactions and language
Reduce Screen Time, Increase Face Time
Screens cannot teach language like human interaction does. Language development requires back-and-forth interaction. Prioritize face-to-face conversation, play, and shared activities.
Sing Songs and Nursery Rhymes
Songs and rhymes support language development by teaching rhythm, melody, and language patterns. Maltese and English songs benefit bilingual children through repetition and predictability.
Be Patient and Positive
- Avoid direct correction — model the correct form naturally
- Praise communication efforts — acknowledge attempts even when words aren’t perfect
- Allow processing time — some children need extra seconds to respond
For personalised support, contact WonderKids on +356 77048650 or at info@wonderkids.mt.