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Communication

How therapy builds a child's communication skills

Therapy builds communication across the ICF Activity & Participation (d3) domain — strengthening receptive understanding, expanding expressive modalities including AAC where needed, targeting pragmatics, and coaching caregivers for generalisation through high-frequency, motivating, play-based practice. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

How therapy builds a child's communication skills
How therapy builds a child's communication skills — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Communication is more than speech — it is the whole bridge between a child's intent and the people around them, and therapy builds that bridge plank by plank.

In short

Therapy builds communication by targeting the full arc of the ICF Activity & Participation (d3) domain — receptive understanding, expressive output, and functional use in real interactions. Speech-language therapists set graded, individualised goals, use evidence-based techniques (modelling, prompting, naturalistic teaching, AAC where indicated), and embed practice into the child's daily routines and play. Progress comes from high-frequency, meaningful repetition in motivating contexts, with caregivers coached as co-therapists.

The mechanisms therapy uses

  • Building receptive language first — comprehension of words, instructions and concepts underpins expression; therapy scaffolds understanding before expecting output.
  • Expanding expressive modalities — words, gestures, sign and, where speech is not yet functional, augmentative and alternative communication (AAC), so the child always has a way to communicate intent. Total communication is never a barrier to speech; it supports it.
  • Naturalistic, child-led teaching — milieu therapy, incidental teaching and play-based routines capitalise on motivation and shared attention, the substrate for genuine communicative exchange.
  • Modelling, expansion and recasting — the therapist models target forms and expands the child's utterances, increasing complexity at the edge of current ability.
  • Pragmatics and social communication — turn-taking, joint attention, requesting, commenting and repair are targeted explicitly, since communication is a social act.
  • Caregiver coaching — generalisation across people and settings is the goal of the d3 domain; parents and teachers are trained to create communication opportunities throughout the day.

When to refer

Refer for SLT assessment where there is limited or no spoken words by expected milestones, regression in language, marked receptive-expressive gap, persistent unintelligibility, or absent communicative intent (pointing, showing, eye gaze). Early referral improves trajectory; pair with a hearing screen and a broader developmental review to clarify contributing factors.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — it is a clinician-administered structured assessment, never an app score. Explore our network of support at [Pinnacle Blooms Network](/), understand the profiling that anchors each plan via the AbilityScore®, and see how goals are delivered through structured speech therapy.

Trusted sources

WHO ICF — Activity & Participation domain (d3), framing communication as both individual capacity and real-world participation; ASHA practice guidance on speech-language intervention and AAC; WHO developmental and communication frameworks.

Next step — Want a precise communication profile and a goal-led plan for your client or child? Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.

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 limited or no spoken words by expected milestones, language regression, a marked gap between understanding and expression, persistent unintelligibility, or absent communicative intent such as pointing, showing or eye gaze.

Try this at home

Create frequent communication opportunities in daily routines — pause and wait for the child to request, model one step above their current level, and accept any modality (word, sign, gesture, picture) as valid communication.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · 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

Does using AAC stop a child from learning to speak?

No. Evidence indicates AAC supports rather than suppresses speech development by giving the child a functional way to communicate and reducing frustration. Many children develop more spoken language alongside AAC use.

Why does therapy focus on understanding before expression?

Receptive language is the foundation for expressive output. Building comprehension of words, instructions and concepts gives the child a base from which expression — in whatever modality — can emerge meaningfully.

How are caregivers involved in communication therapy?

Caregivers are coached as co-therapists to embed communication opportunities into everyday routines and play. This is central to generalisation across people and settings, the real-world goal of the ICF d3 domain.

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