Make a Resolution for More Music in Your Life
Music Can Help to Improve Joint Attention – Defined as the ability for a child and caregiver or therapist to maintain coordinated attention to one another and a shared activity, joint attention is a foundational skill that underlies the development of language and social interaction. Songs that include fingerplay like The Itsy, Bitsy Spider and Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star or body movements like The Wheels on the Bus naturally guide your child’s attention to you.
Music Provides a Predictable Routine - For children that have difficulty moving from one activity to the next, a familiar song consistently sung before, during, or after an activity can help the change go more smoothly. For example, during therapy sessions, a Hello song can help the child settle in and know it is time to work with their SLP and the Clean Up song helps us move from one activity to the next, signals that a transition is coming and gives the child time to prepare, or end the session on a positive note
Music Can Motivate – Most children love music and are excited about participating in an activity when there is a fun beat or catchy words. Instead of asking a child to practice a word, we have seen a lot of success with practice singing a word or practicing vocabulary in a song. Some examples of this include:
Song
Baby Shark
Speech and Language Goal Examples
Early Developing Sounds /m/, /b/and /d/
Consonant- Vowel- Consonant -Vowel (CVCV) and Consonant-Vowel (CV) words – (baby, daddy, mommy, doo)
Song
Who Stole the Cookie from the Cookie Jar?
Speech and Language Goal Examples
Pronouns, Basic questions, and Negation: (me, you, who, couldn’t)
Song
Old MacDonald had a Farm
Speech and Language Goal Examples
Animal Names and Sounds, and Vowel Alternation (e-i-e-i-o)
Song
Hokey Pokey
Speech and Language Goal Examples
Prepositions, Body Parts, and Following Directions: (in, out, shake, turn, left, right, whole)
Song
Slippery Fish
Speech and Language Goal Examples
/f/, sound blends /sl/ and /sw/, animal names, verbs
Remember – you don’t have to be the world’s greatest singer, or even be able to carry a tune for that matter! The most important thing is using music and song to provide valuable opportunities for your child to hear and learn language and sounds in a way that is fun and enjoyable!