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receptive language

One Everyday Therapy activity for your child's receptive language

Try "Find it for me" during daily routines — ask your child to fetch or point to familiar objects, growing from one-step to two-step instructions. It builds understanding without pressure to speak, and fits naturally into dressing, tidying and mealtimes.

One Everyday Therapy activity for your child's receptive language
One everyday way to grow your child's understanding — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

The most powerful language lesson often hides inside the most ordinary moment of your day.

In short

Try "Find it for me" during everyday routines: ask your child to fetch, point to, or hand you a familiar object — "Can you bring me your red shoes?" or "Where's the spoon?" This builds receptive language (understanding) without any pressure to speak, and it fits naturally into tidying up, getting dressed, or laying the table. Keep it playful, celebrate every correct response, and gently model the answer when they need help.

How to make it work

For a 3–7 year old, start simple and grow the challenge as they succeed:
  • One step first: "Get your cup." Once that's easy, add detail — "Get your blue cup."
  • Two-step instructions: "Put the book on the shelf and bring me your socks." This stretches listening and memory together.
  • Position and describing words: "Put teddy under the table" teaches concepts like under, behind, big and small.
  • Pause and wait: give a full five seconds before helping. That quiet space lets your child process the words.
  • Praise the listening, not just the doing: "You listened so carefully!"

Keep it short and joyful — five minutes folded into daily life beats a long drill.

The science

Receptive language — understanding words — develops before expressive speech, which is why a child often follows instructions long before they can say the words back. Responsive, language-rich everyday interaction is one of the most evidence-backed ways to grow comprehension, and tools like the MacArthur–Bates Communicative Development Inventories track exactly this kind of word understanding. Naming and giving simple instructions in real contexts gives words meaning that flashcards cannot.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — this everyday activity supports, but does not replace, that. Our speech therapy team weaves understanding-first goals into play, and you can learn how progress is measured at what is the AbilityScore.

Trusted sources

Guided by WHO Nurturing Care guidance, the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association on early language, and AAP/HealthyChildren guidance on talking and reading with young children.

Next step — try "Find it for me" today, and message our team on WhatsApp +91 91001 81181 for a free developmental check.

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 whether your child follows familiar one-step instructions by around 3 years and two-step instructions as they grow. If understanding seems consistently behind, or they rely heavily on gestures and routines to follow you, a developmental check is worthwhile.

Try this at home

Fold listening into routines: "Bring me your blue cup" or "Put teddy under the table." Pause five full seconds before helping — that quiet lets your child process the words.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 540 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 is the "Find it for me" activity good for?

It suits children roughly 3 to 7 years. Start with one-step instructions like "Get your cup," then add detail and second steps as your child succeeds.

My child doesn't respond — is something wrong?

Not necessarily; children process at different speeds, so pause five seconds and gently model the answer. If understanding seems consistently behind across settings, a friendly developmental check can reassure you.

Does this help if my child isn't talking much yet?

Yes. Receptive language (understanding) develops before speech, so this activity builds the foundation without any pressure on your child to talk.

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