The first series of the Family connections program uses the magic of daily routines to help you support your child in developing communication skills, allowing a deeper connection.
The Family Connections Program guides parents through effective strategies that will help you support your child in developing communication skills through a variety of daily routines and intentional interactions in your everyday life.
Our first series focuses on early language development, and is an 8 week virtual language enrichment program allowing families to learn at their own pace.
$27
The program unpacks the importance of reading, wait time, routines, conversation and being a language model, and how you can use these techniques to help your child develop early language and communication skills.
The improved understanding of your child through this program will help you respond to your child in a way that he/she is able to learn and grow in the best way possible.
Build the foundation for verbal and nonverbal communication for your child.
Understand what type of learner your child is.
Utilize daily actions and activities to benefit your child's growth and language development
Communicate with your child more effectively
Create a better learning environment for your child
Have improved awareness of tasks and routines
Have an improved ability to identify colors and objects
Have an improved ability to respond verbally or with gestures
Have an improved ability to think independently
Have an improved ability to articulate words and phrases
Developing language and communication in your child takes time and requires patience. It involves an intentional approach of verbal and non-verbal interactions with your child. This will build a strong foundation for the building of our language house. These foundational skills are a prerequisite for talking and building the rest of the house. Module 1 unpacks the various levels of building the language house and how to apply these to everyday interactions with your child.
Children learn by observing, listening, exploring, experimenting and asking questions. More specifically, early learners can be classified into object-oriented learners or people-oriented learners. Understanding the mechanisms behind these two types of learning will allow you to respond to your child in a way that he/she receives information, enhancing their capacity to learn and grow optimally. In module 2, we explore the differences between object-oriented and people-oriented learners. Join us as we dive deeper into the strategies and approaches that you can take to enhance your child’s growth and development according to how they learn.
Routines are a crucial part of your young child’s development. They provide comfort and a sense of safety to young children and provide a great opportunity for language development. In module 3, we learn about the importance of routines and how you can utilize daily actions to benefit your child’s growth and language development.
Talking and modeling language throughout the day by repeating words in a meaningful context to your child will help him or her learn new words. In module 4, we unpack the difference between self-talk and parallel-talk. Together, we explore ways we can improve language modeling during daily interactions with your child and the benefits modeling language has on your child’s development.
Wait time is the amount of time you take to pause and wait during communication with your child. Increasing wait time between verbal interactions is an important strategy to allow enough processing time and will help your child with a language delay. In module 5, we learn how and when to use wait time when interacting with your child. Together, we explore the associated benefits of implementing wait time when communicating with your child.
Make communicating with your child a conversation, not a quiz. You and your child are both equal partners in the communication process. A communication partner involves at least two people who take turns on either end of the sender-receiver connection. In module 6, we explore different strategies of how you can be a better communication partner for your child.
Story time and reading gives your child diverse exposure and more opportunities to connect the spoken word to the written word. Scheduling time for book reading will support your child’s cognitive development and enhance their receptive and expressive language skills. In module 7, we discuss the benefits of story time and reading. Together, we learn about ways to make reading more fun for your child.
When you are engaged in play or daily routines with your child, use simple phrases and sentences to talk about or narrate what you are doing. This will help your child become more familiar with his or her surrounding environment and encourage them to use more mature language when trying to communicate. In module 8, we learn how to use self-talk narration, language expansion, and extension techniques during daily routines with your child.