Speech and Language Delay
AbilityScore 500–600 for Speech and Language Delay: what to do next
An AbilityScore of 500–600 is a personalised starting point, not a verdict. The next step is to turn it into a clear plan with your clinician: agree everyday goals, begin consistent speech therapy, and schedule a re-measure against your child's own baseline.
An AbilityScore in the 500–600 band is a starting line, not a verdict — and it points to a clear, hopeful next step.
In short
An AbilityScore® in the 500–600 band is your clinician's structured snapshot of where your child's communication sits today — it gives the therapy team a precise, personalised starting point. The next step is simple: turn that measurement into a plan. Sit with your Pinnacle clinician, agree two or three goals that matter in everyday life, and begin regular speech therapy with a re-measure scheduled so you can see movement against your child's own baseline.What this band means for your next move
Think of the AbilityScore® as a map reference, not a label. For a child with [Speech and Language Delay](/) (WHO ICD-11 6A01), this band tells the team how much support to start with and where to focus — understanding, expression, play-based interaction, or a mix.- Confirm the plan — your speech-language pathologist translates the score into specific, real-life goals (more words, two-word phrases, following instructions, being understood by people outside the family).
- Begin consistent therapy — frequency and intensity are matched to this band, then adjusted as your child responds.
- Carry it home — the most powerful practice happens in your daily routines, coached by your therapist.
- Re-measure — a scheduled re-assessment compares your child to their earlier self, so quiet progress becomes visible and the plan stays right-sized.
Development moves in spurts and plateaus, so one score is a beginning. What matters is the direction of travel over the coming weeks.
The Pinnacle way
Your child's AbilityScore® — and any diagnosis — is formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, by a qualified clinician using a structured, clinician-administered assessment; it is never decided by a number alone or from an online form. With 2.5 billion+ data points, 25 million+ therapy sessions and 4.95 lakh+ families served across 70+ centres, your clinician sets goals against your child's own baseline and reviews them with you. Learn more about how the AbilityScore is calculated and explore speech therapy.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 (6A01, developmental speech or language disorders); CDC 'Learn the Signs. Act Early.' milestone guidance; American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org); Indian Academy of Pediatrics; RBSK developmental screening.Next step — Book a review with your Pinnacle speech-language pathologist to turn this band into a personalised plan. Start here.
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 steady, real-life movement over the coming weeks — a new word or gesture, following an instruction first time, or being understood more easily. Flag to your clinician if your child loses words once used or grows frustrated and withdrawn when trying to communicate.
Try this at home
Narrate your routines and leave a gap for your child to fill: "We're putting on your…?" Pause, wait, and warmly celebrate any attempt — a sound, word or gesture. Ten minutes of this back-and-forth daily is gentle, powerful practice.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10
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
Is an AbilityScore of 500–600 good or bad?
It is neither — it is a measurement, not a grade. The band gives your clinician a precise starting point for planning therapy and a baseline to measure progress against. What matters most is the direction of travel over the coming weeks, reviewed with your clinician.
What is the very next thing we should do?
Meet your Pinnacle speech-language pathologist to translate the score into two or three everyday goals, begin consistent therapy matched to this band, and schedule a re-measure so progress against your child's own baseline becomes visible.
Will the score change?
Yes — development moves in spurts and plateaus, and the AbilityScore is re-measured over time. Comparing your child to their earlier self is how quiet progress is made visible and the plan kept right-sized.
Does this band mean my child has a diagnosis?
No. The AbilityScore is a structured snapshot, not a diagnosis. Any diagnosis is formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre by a qualified clinician, never from a number alone.