Social Stories
Working on Social Stories With Your Child at Home
A Social Story is a short, first-person, picture-supported story that describes a tricky situation and what your child can do. Read it calmly before the event, keep the language kind and positive, and repeat it daily so it becomes familiar — it reassures and prepares, it never corrects.
A Social Story isn't a script to memorise — it's a calm rehearsal that helps your child know what to expect, so the real moment feels less surprising.
In short
A Social Story is a short, gentle, first-person story that describes a situation, what usually happens, and what your child can do — written in their own words and read together before the moment arrives. At home, keep it short and positive, read it calmly at a quiet time (not in the middle of a meltdown), and repeat it daily so it becomes familiar. The aim is reassurance and understanding, never correction.How to do it at home
1. Pick one situation your child finds tricky — a haircut, a birthday party, brushing teeth, the school drop-off. Choose just one to start.2. Write it simply, in your child's voice. Three to six short lines work best:
- Describe what happens: "Sometimes we go to get a haircut."
- Reassure with feelings: "The scissors make a clicking sound. That is okay."
- Guide gently: "I can sit still and hold my toy. When it is done, I get to choose a sticker."
3. Add pictures. Photos of the real place, person or object help your child connect the story to real life. A printed booklet or phone photos both work.
4. Read it at a calm time — before the event, perhaps the night before and again that morning. Keep your voice warm and unhurried.
5. Repeat and revisit. Read the same story for several days. Once the situation goes smoothly a few times, you can ease off.
6. Keep the language kind. Use "I can" and "sometimes" rather than "you must" or "don't". Stories work because they describe and reassure, not because they command.
When it helps most
Social Stories are especially useful for new routines, transitions, and situations with lots of sensory surprises. If a story isn't helping after a fair try, or if your child's anxiety around everyday situations seems to be growing, that's a good moment to bring a speech and communication therapist into the picture — they can tailor stories to exactly how your child learns and pair them with other supports.The Pinnacle way
Every child responds to stories differently, so our therapists shape each one around your child's interests, language level and the specific moments that feel hard at home. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — a Social Story is a everyday support, not an assessment. Explore more on Social Stories and how we weave them into a child's communication plan.Trusted sources
Approaches here align with guidance from the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) on social communication supports, and with child-development resources from the American Academy of Pediatrics via HealthyChildren.org.Next step — for a story tailored to your child and a friendly developmental check, book a Pinnacle assessment or message our 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 a Social Story isn't easing things after a fair try, or your child's anxiety around everyday situations is growing rather than settling, bring a speech and communication therapist in to tailor the approach.
Try this at home
Read the same Social Story at a calm time — the night before and again that morning — not during a meltdown. Repetition is what makes it feel familiar and safe.
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
How long should a Social Story be?
Short and simple — three to six lines for younger children. Use your child's own words, keep sentences positive, and add a few photos so the story connects to real life.
When should I read the Social Story to my child?
Read it at a calm, quiet time before the situation happens — perhaps the night before and again that morning. Avoid reading it during a meltdown; the goal is gentle preparation, not correction.
How often should I use the same story?
Read the same story daily for several days until the situation feels familiar. Once it goes smoothly a few times, you can gradually ease off.
What if the Social Story doesn't seem to help?
Give it a fair try over a week or two. If it isn't helping, or your child's worry seems to be growing, a speech and communication therapist can tailor stories to how your child learns and pair them with other supports.