Speech And Language Therapy
What is speech and language therapy?
Speech and language therapy is specialist support that helps children communicate — understanding others, finding and forming words, building sentences, and using speech, sounds, gestures or other tools to connect. Delivered by a qualified speech-language therapist, it begins with understanding how your child communicates, then builds a playful, individualised plan. It supports everything from clear speech sounds to language, social communication, and safe eating and swallowing.
When words feel just out of reach — for the child trying to speak or the family longing to understand them — speech and language therapy gently builds the bridge.
In short
Speech and language therapy is specialist support that helps children communicate — understanding others, finding and forming words, putting sentences together, and using speech, sounds, gestures or other tools to connect with the world. It is delivered by a qualified speech-language therapist who first understands how your child communicates, then builds a playful, individualised plan. It supports everything from clear speech sounds to language, social communication, and even safe eating and swallowing.What speech and language therapy actually involves
Communication is far bigger than talking. A speech-language therapist looks at the whole picture: understanding (does your child follow what is said?), expression (can they share their wants, ideas and feelings?), speech sounds (are words clear?), social communication (turn-taking, eye contact, play), and sometimes feeding and swallowing safety. Therapy might help a late talker find first words, support a child who stammers, build clearer speech sounds, strengthen sentence-building, or open up alternative ways to communicate — pictures, signs or devices (often called AAC) — for a child who is not yet speaking. Every session is built around play and your child's interests, because children learn language best when they are enjoying themselves. Crucially, the therapist coaches you too, so the everyday moments at home — bath time, mealtime, the school run — become gentle opportunities to grow communication.When it helps to ask
It is worth a friendly review if your child is not babbling or pointing in the early years, has noticeably fewer words than peers, is hard to understand, finds it tough to follow simple instructions, struggles to join in with other children, or seems frustrated trying to make themselves understood. Earlier support means communication can grow alongside confidence — and very often, it brings reassurance.The Pinnacle way
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, never from an app or form. Our therapists begin by understanding your child's unique communication style, then shape a warm, play-led plan through speech therapy, keeping you as an everyday partner. Start by exploring how we [work with families](/).Trusted sources
The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) on the scope of speech-language pathology; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on communication milestones and early support.Next step — If you have ever wondered whether your child's communication is on track, book a gentle speech and language screen — it is the kindest first step.
What to watch
Not babbling or pointing in the early years, far fewer words than peers, speech that is hard to understand, difficulty following simple instructions, trouble joining other children, or visible frustration when trying to be understood.
Try this at home
Turn everyday moments into talking time: narrate what you are doing during bath, meals or play, pause to let your child respond, and follow their lead by talking about whatever has caught their interest.
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
At what age can speech and language therapy start?
Support can begin in the early years — therapists work with toddlers and even babies showing early communication differences, often by coaching parents. There is no need to 'wait and see' if you have concerns; an early, friendly review is always worthwhile.
My child is not talking yet — can therapy still help?
Yes. Therapy supports children who are not yet speaking by building understanding, play and connection first, and by introducing alternative ways to communicate — gestures, pictures or devices — so your child has a voice while spoken language develops.
Is speech therapy only about pronunciation?
No. It covers understanding language, expressing ideas, building sentences, social communication, clear speech sounds, and sometimes safe eating and swallowing. Clear pronunciation is just one part of a much bigger picture.
Will I be involved in the therapy?
Absolutely. You are your child's most important communication partner. A good therapist coaches you so everyday routines at home become natural opportunities for communication to grow.