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Object Substitution

How to Work on Object Substitution With Your Child at Home

Build object substitution through joyful, low-pressure pretend play: model using one thing for another out loud, offer open-ended items like boxes and scarves, follow your child's lead, and stretch ideas gently over time. No special toys needed.

How to Work on Object Substitution With Your Child at Home
Object Substitution Play at Home — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

When a banana becomes a telephone and a wooden block turns into a car, your child isn't just playing — they're building the very foundation of imagination, language, and flexible thinking.

In short

Object substitution is when a child uses one thing to stand for another in pretend play — a stick for a spoon, a box for a boat. You can grow this at home with simple, joyful play: model the idea out loud, follow your child's lead, and offer open-ended objects that can 'become' many things. No special toys are needed — your kitchen and living room are perfect.

Easy ways to practise at home

Start by modelling, simply
  • Pick up a banana, hold it to your ear and say, "Hello? Is that you?" — then giggle and hand it over.
  • Use a block as a car: "Brrm, the car is driving!" Keep your voice playful and pause to let your child join in.
  • Narrate as you go so the 'pretend' idea is spoken aloud: "This bowl is my hat!"

Offer open-ended objects

  • Keep a basket of plain items — cardboard boxes, scarves, wooden spoons, blocks, paper rolls. These invite more substitution than toys that only do one thing.
  • A scarf can be a river, a blanket, a superhero cape. Ask, "What could this be today?"

Follow your child's lead

  • If your child puts a cup on their head, join in: "What a lovely hat!" Building on their idea matters more than correcting it.
  • Keep it low-pressure. Two or three minutes of shared pretend play is plenty — stop while it's still fun.

Stretch it gently over time

  • Once one substitution is easy, add a second: the box is a boat and the spoon is an oar.
  • Link it to a tiny story: "The teddy is hungry — what can we use for his dinner?"

Why this helps

Pretend play with object substitution supports symbolic thinking — understanding that one thing can represent another. This same skill underpins language (words stand for things), problem-solving, and social imagination. Children often move from using realistic props to using very different objects, and finally to imagining objects that aren't there at all. Meeting your child where they are, and celebrating each small leap, is exactly the right approach.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — home play is for nurturing, not assessing. If you'd like guided strategies tailored to your child, our team can help. Explore object substitution and how it fits broader play skills, or speak with our child development experts about a personalised plan.

Trusted sources

Guidance here aligns with developmental play principles from the American Academy of Pediatrics and its family resource HealthyChildren, and with communication-development guidance from the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.

Next step — try one playful substitution today, and to map your child's play and communication strengths, book an assessment with Pinnacle Blooms Network 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

Watch for your child moving from realistic props to very different objects, then to imagining objects that aren't there. If pretend play hasn't emerged by around 2.5–3 years, mention it at a general developmental check.

Try this at home

Keep a small basket of plain, open-ended objects — boxes, scarves, blocks, paper rolls — within reach. These spark far more substitution play than single-purpose toys.

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 does object substitution usually start?

Simple substitutions — like holding a banana as a phone — often emerge around 18–24 months, growing richer through the third year. Every child develops at their own pace; if pretend play hasn't appeared by around 2.5–3 years, mention it at a developmental check.

What toys are best for object substitution?

Open-ended, plain items work best: cardboard boxes, scarves, wooden spoons, blocks and paper rolls. These can 'become' many things, unlike toys that do only one job.

What if my child copies me but doesn't pretend on their own?

That's a normal early step. Keep modelling, leave pauses for them to join in, and build on any idea they offer. Independent pretend play often follows once the idea has been shared playfully many times.

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