Interactive Puppet
Interactive Puppet Play at Home with Your Child
Interactive puppet play uses a hand or sock puppet as a friendly partner to build eye contact, turn-taking, imitation and early language. Sit face-to-face, give the puppet a voice, pause to invite your child's turn, and keep sessions short and joyful — ten minutes a day, repeated over time.
A simple puppet on your hand can turn a quiet afternoon into a back-and-forth conversation — and that gentle to-and-fro is exactly how early communication grows.
In short
Interactive puppet play means using a hand or finger puppet as a playful partner who looks, listens, talks and takes turns with your child. It builds eye contact, turn-taking, imitation, listening and pretend play — all in short, joyful bursts. You need nothing fancy: a sock, a soft toy on your hand, or a shop-bought puppet works beautifully, and ten minutes a day is plenty.How to do it at home
Set the scene- Sit face-to-face at your child's eye level, with few distractions and the TV off.
- Start with one puppet. Give it a name, a soft voice and a friendly personality your child enjoys.
Build the back-and-forth
- Let the puppet greet and wait — "Hello! (pause) What's your name?" — then leave a long, expectant pause for your child to respond.
- Use turn-taking games: the puppet peeks out, hides (peek-a-boo), then your child makes it hide. Copy each other.
- Encourage imitation — the puppet claps, blows a kiss, or makes a silly sound, and your child copies. Then let your child lead and you copy.
- Add simple choices: "Does Puppet want the apple or the banana?" This invites words or pointing.
Grow the play
- Narrate feelings — "Puppet is sleepy… Puppet is happy!" — to name emotions.
- Build tiny stories: the puppet eats breakfast, brushes teeth, says goodnight.
- Follow your child's lead. If they laugh at one bit, do more of it. Joy keeps them engaged.
Keep sessions short and stop while it's still fun. Repetition over days matters more than length.
What you're nurturing
Face-to-face puppet play strengthens joint attention (sharing focus with you), reciprocal turn-taking, listening, imitation and the foundations of pretend play and language. Because the puppet is playful and low-pressure, many children who find direct conversation hard will happily "talk" to a puppet first.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — home play like this complements, and never replaces, that assessment. Our therapists weave techniques like Interactive Puppet into speech therapy plans tailored to each child, then coach families to carry them on at home.Trusted sources
Guidance on play-based communication and turn-taking is aligned with the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) and AAP family resources on healthychildren.org, which emphasise responsive, face-to-face interaction as a foundation for early language.Next step — try one ten-minute puppet session today, and book a developmental assessment at your nearest Pinnacle Blooms Network centre to see how this fits your child's plan.
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 whether your child responds to the puppet's pauses, copies actions, and shares enjoyment with you. If by 18–24 months there's little response to name, no pointing or shared smiling, or no single words, arrange a developmental check rather than waiting.
Try this at home
Use a long, expectant pause after the puppet speaks — silence is the invitation that gives your child room to take their turn.
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
What age is interactive puppet play good for?
It suits toddlers and preschoolers from around 12 months upwards, and can be adapted simpler or richer to match your child's stage. Follow what delights your child rather than a strict age rule.
What if my child ignores the puppet?
Start small and slow — let the puppet simply appear, wave and make a gentle sound near a favourite toy. Pair it with something your child already loves, keep it brief, and try again another day. Persistent lack of response to play and people is worth mentioning at a developmental check.
Do I need a special puppet?
No. A clean sock, a soft toy held on your hand, or a paper-bag puppet works just as well. What matters is your warm voice, eye contact and the back-and-forth — not the puppet itself.