The Picture Exchange Communication System (Pecs)
Supporting PECS Goals at Home
PECS goals are supported at home by keeping picture cards available everywhere, creating motivating reasons to communicate, and honouring every exchange instantly by giving the child exactly what the picture shows. Following the child's lead and staying in step with the therapist's phase keeps progress steady. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
When you and your child share the same picture cards at home, every snack, toy and bedtime becomes a chance to say something — and to be truly heard.
In short
The most powerful thing you can do at home is make the picture cards available everywhere your child wants something, and honour every exchange instantly — when your child hands you a picture, give them exactly what the picture shows, straight away. PECS works because communication brings a real, motivating result, so keep favourite items just out of reach, stay patient, and let your child lead. Steady daily practice in real moments — meals, play, bathtime — is what turns the system from a therapy-room skill into your child's everyday voice.How to support PECS goals at home
- Create reasons to communicate. Place much-loved snacks, toys or activities in sight but out of reach, so your child has something genuinely worth asking for.
- Honour every exchange immediately. When your child gives you a picture, hand over that exact item at once and name it warmly ("Bubbles!"). The instant result is what teaches the lesson.
- Keep the cards within reach. A communication book or board near where activities happen — kitchen, play area, bathroom — means your child can always reach their words.
- *Resist talking for* them. Pause and wait. Give your child the chance to initiate the exchange rather than guessing or prompting too soon.
- Use a gentle two-person prompt when needed. Early on, one adult tempts with the item while a second quietly helps your child pick up and hand over the card — then fades that help as your child gets it.
- Keep your therapist in the loop. Ask which PECS phase your child is in and which pictures to focus on, so home and centre move together.
- Celebrate, never test. Follow your child's interest; PECS should feel like getting wonderful things, not like an exam.
As your child grows confident, your therapist will guide you through the later phases — building sentences with an "I want" strip, commenting, and answering questions — so the home strategy grows with them.
When to check in with your team
If exchanges have stalled, if your child seems frustrated reaching for words, or if you're unsure how to move to the next phase, a quick review with your speech-language therapist keeps progress on track. Bring along notes on what's working at home — your real-world observations shape the next steps.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an app or a card book at home. Our therapists tailor each child's speech therapy plan and coach you on the exact PECS phase and pictures to practise. Explore [how we work](/) and understand your child's communication profile through the AbilityScore®.Trusted sources
ASHA guidance on augmentative and alternative communication for children; American Academy of Pediatrics family resources (HealthyChildren.org); WHO developmental and communication guidance.Next step —** Want a PECS home plan made for your child? Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Watch for exchanges stalling, growing frustration when reaching for words, your child not initiating on their own, or uncertainty about moving to the next PECS phase.
Try this at home
Keep one favourite snack or toy just out of reach with its picture card nearby — and the moment your child hands you the card, give the item instantly and name it warmly.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
What is the most important thing to do at home for PECS?
Honour every picture exchange immediately — when your child hands you a card, give them exactly what it shows, straight away, and name it warmly. That instant, motivating result is what teaches your child their pictures truly work.
Should I talk for my child or wait?
Pause and wait. Resist guessing or prompting too soon so your child gets the chance to initiate the exchange themselves. Early on, a gentle two-person prompt can help, but fade that help as soon as your child catches on.
Where should I keep the picture cards?
Keep the communication book or board within easy reach wherever activities happen — the kitchen, play area and bathroom — so your child can always reach their words in real moments.
How do I know when to move to the next PECS phase?
Your speech-language therapist will guide the timing based on your child's current phase. Share what's working at home, and they'll show you how to progress — from single exchanges to sentence strips, commenting and answering questions.