Member Reviews

A very informative and inspiring book providing plenty of milestones and ideas for activities to encourage emerging language and communication. As a grandmother, it was great to have this resource at hand.

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This is a very well planned and executed book, a book that will benefit any parent who invests, digests and follows through on the contents!

For any parents looking to do their best for their child's all important language skills, this books gives information on what is typical at each stage of development, and vitally, what they can do i to support their young child's language skills. It is a book that can accompany a child through their early years, being dipped in and out of as the child matures.

The practical activities are just lovely, the fact they support language development is a bonus!

I wouldn't hesitate to recommend this to new and experienced parents, or as a gift to prospective parents.

My thanks to Netgalley, author and publisher for the opportunity to review this book in exchange for an honest review.

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This was an interesting read. I currently have an 18-month-old who is learning more and more words every day, so I wanted to read this in order to pick up some tips for encouraging his love of language. It's a mixed bag in terms of its usefulness if you're a parent with any common sense; a lot of the tips in the book revolve around paying attention to your child, talking to them, listening to them, and responding to them, which seems incredibly obvious to me. I also think that the parents who need to be told to read books or have conversations with their children are probably not the parents who would pick up a book like this, so there's an element of preaching to the choir. It can be repetitive at times (for example, it tells you so many times that a child needs to hear a word 500 times in context before learning it) and occasionally melodramatic (I had to laugh at the dramatic imagining of the life of a child who struggled with words, ending up in crime and misery).

That being said, there are nuggets of interest in here: I appreciated some of the insight into HOW a child learns - for example, I didn't know that putting a key word at the end of the sentence makes it easier to understand (so if you want your child to learn to say "dog", say "look at that dog", not "there's a dog over there"). There are plenty of practical small suggestions for ways to encourage speech, some of which are bound to be new to each reader (like pausing before you hand something over so that they need to ask for it). Again, a lot of this you will hopefully already be doing naturally, but I suppose that's quite reassuring if so! There's also some interesting tangents about attention spans and personality that I enjoyed more than the actual speech part of the book.

An interesting read overall, and I learned some things I'll be putting into practice.

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