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GestureBased Needs

Working on Gesture-Based Needs With Your Child at Home

Build your child's gesture communication at home by creating reasons to ask, modelling simple gestures like waving and pointing, and responding warmly the moment they try. Short, playful daily moments — bubbles, choices, books, peekaboo — turn ordinary routines into early communication practice.

Working on Gesture-Based Needs With Your Child at Home
Growing Your Child's Gestures at Home — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Before words arrive, your child has a whole language of reaching, pointing and showing — and you can grow it, gently, in the rhythm of an ordinary day.

In short

Gesture-based communication — pointing, waving, reaching, showing and giving — is how children share what they want and feel before clear speech arrives. You can build it at home by pausing to let your child ask, modelling simple gestures yourself, and warmly responding the moment they try. These small, playful moments, repeated daily, are powerful early communication practice.

Easy activities you can try at home

Make a reason to communicate
  • Hold a favourite toy or snack just out of reach and wait — give your child a beat to point, reach or look at you before you help.
  • Offer choices: hold up two things and pause, so your child gestures towards the one they want.
  • "Forget" a step on purpose — give the cup without juice — and wait for them to show you what's missing.

Model the gesture, then respond

  • Pair every word with a gesture: wave for "bye-bye", open palms for "all gone", arms up for "up".
  • When your child reaches or points, respond straight away and name it: "You want the ball! Here it is." This tells them gestures work.
  • Use big, friendly gestures during songs and books — clap, point to pictures, blow kisses.

Play that grows pointing and showing

  • Bubbles and balloons invite pointing and reaching naturally — pause between blows.
  • Look at picture books together and point to things you name; cheer when they point back.
  • Play peekaboo and "give and take" games to build the back-and-forth turn-taking that gestures live in.

Keep it short, joyful and pressure-free — five playful minutes several times a day beats one long session. Follow your child's lead and celebrate every attempt, even a small one.

When to check in with a professional

Many children build gestures at their own pace. It's worth a friendly developmental check if, by around 12 months, your child isn't pointing, waving or showing things to share interest, or if you simply feel something isn't clicking. Early support is encouraging, not alarming — the sooner you explore gesture-based needs, the more natural everyday moments you can turn into communication wins.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under the care of a qualified clinician — never from an online read or a home checklist. Our team has guided 4.95 lakh+ families across 70+ centres, and we'll help you weave communication practice into your day. Explore our speech therapy approach, see how the AbilityScore® gives an objective, multi-domain baseline, and learn more about supporting gesture-based needs at home.

Trusted sources

Guided by WHO Nurturing Care guidance on early communication, the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) on early gestures and language, and the CDC "Learn the Signs. Act Early." developmental milestones.

Next step — for a warm, no-pressure developmental check and a home-activity plan tailored to your child, book an assessment with the Pinnacle team on WhatsApp: +91 91001 81181.

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

If by around 12 months your child isn't pointing, waving or showing things to share interest with you — or if attempts to communicate fade rather than grow — book a friendly developmental check rather than waiting it out.

Try this at home

Pause before you help. Hold a favourite toy just out of reach, count to five silently, and give your child the chance to point, reach or look at you first — then respond with delight.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · 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

At what age should my child start using gestures?

Most children begin pointing, waving and showing things to share interest around 9 to 12 months. Gestures usually come before clear words and are an important early communication step. If you don't see these by about 12 months, a friendly developmental check is worthwhile.

What if my child gets frustrated when I pause before helping?

A short pause to give your child a chance to gesture is helpful, but keep it warm and brief — a few seconds, not a standoff. If they show any sign of asking, respond straight away. The goal is to encourage communication, never to cause distress.

Will using gestures delay my child's speech?

No — the opposite. Gestures are a natural bridge to spoken words. When you pair gestures with the words you say, you give your child two ways to learn the meaning, which supports speech rather than slowing it.

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