Joint Attention Activities during
Joint Attention Activities You Can Do at Home
Joint attention is the shared back-and-forth focus between you and your child. Build it at home by following your child's lead, pointing and labelling, using bubbles and books, and pausing for them to respond — short, joyful, daily play works best.
Joint attention — that magical moment when your child looks at something, then back at you to share the wonder — is one of the deepest building blocks of communication, and you can nurture it in everyday play.
In short
Joint attention is the shared focus between you and your child on the same object or event, with that back-and-forth glance that says "are you seeing this too?" You can build it at home through simple, joyful routines — following your child's lead, pointing and labelling, and pausing for them to respond. Little and often, woven into daily play, works far better than long formal sessions.Activities you can try at home
Follow your child's lead. Notice what they are already looking at, then join in. Name it warmly — "Oh, the red ball!" — and look from the object back to their eyes. You are showing them that sharing attention feels good.Point and show. Point to interesting things during the day — a bird, a bus, a light switching on. Pause, look at your child, and wait. Celebrate when they follow your point or look back at you.
Bubbles and balloons. Blow bubbles, then stop. Hold the wand and wait expectantly, looking between the bubbles and your child. This natural pause invites them to look at you to ask for "more".
Shared picture books. Sit close, point to pictures, and look at your child as you name them. Let them turn pages and point to what they like.
Sing with actions. Songs like Twinkle Twinkle with hand actions give repeated, predictable moments to share eye contact and gesture.
Face-to-face play. Peekaboo, tickle games and "ready, steady, go!" all build the back-and-forth looking that underpins joint attention.
Keep sessions short, end on a happy note, and follow the play your child enjoys most — engagement matters more than getting it "right".
When to check in with someone
If by around 12–18 months your child rarely follows your point, seldom looks back to share interest, or doesn't bring things to show you, it is worth a gentle developmental check. These are observations to share with a professional — not a diagnosis — and early support is always encouraging, never alarming.The Pinnacle way
At Pinnacle Blooms Network, joint attention is one of the earliest social-communication skills our therapists nurture through play-based speech therapy and structured home coaching. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — learn how in the AbilityScore® explained, and explore more joint attention activities to practise at home.Trusted sources
Guidance here aligns with developmental milestone resources from the CDC's "Learn the Signs. Act Early." programme, the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association on early social communication, and the AAP's HealthyChildren resources on play and shared attention.Next step — message our team on WhatsApp at +91 91001 81181 to book a developmental check or get personalised joint-attention play ideas for your child.
What to watch
By around 12–18 months, watch for whether your child follows your point, looks back to share interest, and brings things to show you. If these are rare, share your observations at a gentle developmental check — early support is always encouraging.
Try this at home
Blow bubbles, then stop and hold the wand. Wait, looking between the bubbles and your child's eyes — that expectant pause invites them to look at you to ask for 'more', sparking joint attention naturally.
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 is joint attention in simple terms?
Joint attention is when your child and you focus on the same thing together, with that back-and-forth glance that shares the moment — like looking at a bird, then looking at you to say 'did you see that too?'. It is a key building block for communication and language.
At what age does joint attention usually develop?
Babies begin following a caregiver's gaze from around 6–9 months, and most children point and look back to share interest by 12–18 months. Every child develops at their own pace, so these are gentle guides rather than fixed rules.
How long should home activities last?
Short and frequent works best — a few minutes woven into everyday play, ending on a happy note. Following the games your child already enjoys matters far more than long formal sessions.
When should I speak to a professional?
If by around 12–18 months your child rarely follows your point, seldom looks back to share interest, or doesn't bring things to show you, it's worth a gentle developmental check. These are observations to discuss, not a diagnosis.