TurnTaking Conversation Board
Using a TurnTaking Conversation Board at Home
A TurnTaking Conversation Board uses a simple visual board and a token to show whose turn it is, helping your child learn back-and-forth communication. At home, start with two clear, playful turns in a fun game, pause and wait for your child, accept any attempt, and grow slowly. Keep sessions short and joyful, and share any persistent difficulty with a speech therapist.
Every great conversation is a gentle game of catch — one person throws, the other catches and throws back. A TurnTaking Conversation Board makes that invisible rhythm visible for your child.
In short
A TurnTaking Conversation Board is a simple visual tool — a board or mat with a marker, token or picture cards — that shows your child whose turn it is to speak or play. At home you build turn-taking in tiny, playful steps: you take a turn, then clearly hand the turn to your child, and you celebrate every back-and-forth. Start with two clear turns and grow slowly, keeping it fun rather than perfect.How to do it at home
Set it up simply- Use any board, tray or paper split into two halves — one side "My turn", one side "Your turn". A small token or arrow shows whose turn it is.
- Sit face to face so your child can see your eyes, mouth and the board easily.
Start with easy, motivating turns
- Begin with a fun, low-pressure game: rolling a ball, stacking blocks, posting shapes, or pressing a noisy toy. Say "My turn" as you act, then move the token and say "Your turn".
- Pause and wait. Give your child a generous few seconds — silence is your friend, it leaves room for them to step in.
Move from actions to words
- Once turn-taking with actions feels easy, add words: naming a picture, choosing a song, answering a simple question, or adding to a story one line each.
- Model the kind of turn you want — short and clear — then hand it over. Accept any attempt: a word, a sound, a point or a gesture all count.
Keep the rhythm joyful
- Praise the swap, not just the speaking: "You waited for your turn — lovely!"
- Two or three minutes done happily beats ten minutes of pressure. Stop while it is still fun.
If your child finds waiting very hard, finds it tough to look or respond, or rarely starts a back-and-forth even in play, that is useful information worth sharing with a speech therapist — not a reason to worry.
The Pinnacle way
A TurnTaking Conversation Board is one playful piece of a bigger communication journey. To understand exactly where your child is and which next steps fit them best, 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 app or a home activity alone. Our therapists can show you how to use the TurnTaking Conversation Board and weave it into daily routines. Across 70+ centres in 4 states, 700+ therapists have supported 4.95 lakh+ families with exactly this kind of warm, practical coaching.Trusted sources
Guidance here is consistent with the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) on early social communication and turn-taking, the American Academy of Pediatrics' Healthychildren.org on talking and listening with young children, and WHO nurturing-care guidance on responsive, back-and-forth interaction.Next step — book a communication assessment to learn how to use the TurnTaking Conversation Board for your child's exact stage. 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
Watch how your child manages waiting and swapping turns: are they starting to anticipate "your turn", attempting a word, sound or gesture, and tolerating a short pause? If, after several relaxed sessions, your child rarely takes a turn, struggles to wait at all, or seldom starts a back-and-forth even in favourite play, note it and share with a speech therapist.
Try this at home
Turn everyday moments into turns: passing food at dinner, rolling a ball, or saying lines of a familiar song one at a time. Say "my turn", then "your turn", and wait a few extra seconds for your child to step in.
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 can I start using a TurnTaking Conversation Board?
You can begin gentle turn-taking in play from toddlerhood, well before many words appear, using actions like rolling a ball. The board itself helps most once your child can attend to a shared activity for a minute or two. Match it to your child's stage rather than their age, and keep it playful.
My child won't wait for their turn. What should I do?
That is very common and not a failure. Start with very fast turns so the wait is tiny, use a clear token or arrow so the "swap" is visible, and praise the waiting itself. If waiting stays very hard across many relaxed sessions, mention it to a speech therapist for tailored ideas.
Do I need a special board to do this?
No. Any tray, paper folded in half, or two cushions can mark "my turn" and "your turn". A small toy, coin or arrow makes a fine token. The principle — clear, visible turns and patient waiting — matters far more than the materials.
How long should each session be?
Short and happy wins every time. Two to three minutes of joyful back-and-forth is more valuable than ten minutes of pressure. Stop while your child is still enjoying it, so they look forward to the next time.