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Boost Your Toddler’s Speech and Language at Home

Toddlertalkcoach.site

Boost Your Toddler’s Speech and Language at Home

Caregiver modeling words with a toddler during play using books, a puppet, blocks and a toy phone in a warm home setting

Best Toys for Speech Development in 2025: An SLP-Approved List

  • Play-Based Learning & Activities

Play is how toddlers learn language. This SLP-approved 2025 guide helps caregivers choose toys and design play that boosts speech and vocabulary. It covers age-based milestones, evidence-based techniques like modeling and expansion, bilingual and AAC-friendly strategies, activity scripts you can…

  • 24.12.2025
Toddler and parent co watching a speech focused kids video on a tablet while playing with toys and labeling words

YouTube Kids and Speech: The Ms. Rachel Effect Explained

  • Screen Time & Technology

Ms. Rachel’s Songs for Littles has many parents asking: can YouTube Kids help toddlers learn language? This article explains the “Ms. Rachel effect” — what makes her videos speech-friendly, what research and pediatric guidelines say, and how caregivers can turn…

  • 24.12.2025
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Explore

  • Articulation & Pronunciation
  • Home Speech Therapy Strategies
  • Milestones & Development Tracking
  • Play-Based Learning & Activities
  • Screen Time & Technology
  • Speech Delays & Red Flags
  • Vocabulary & First Words

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    Sensory Bins for Vocabulary: 10 Easy Ideas for Language Learning
  • Parent and toddler on a rug reading picture books and playing with toys while the parent labels objects to help the child learn new words
    The First 50 Words: A Checklist for Toddler Vocabulary
  • Parent and toddler playing with picture cards as the toddler echoes a word, in a cozy home setting
    Echolalia Explained: Why Your Toddler Repeats Everything You Say
  • Toddler and caregiver playing and talking together at home with toys and a book; screens are turned off in the background to emphasize face-to-face interaction.
    Screen Time and Speech Delay: What the Research Says
  • Parent and 3-year-old playing with picture cards and book on a colorful rug while practicing words, with a visible speech log notebook nearby
    Speech Intelligibility Chart: How Much Should You Understand by Age 3?
  • Caregiver and toddler pointing at a colorful visual schedule with photo cards and word labels in a bright home playroom
    Visual Schedules for Toddlers: Reducing Tantrums and Boosting Language
  • Caregiver gently removing a toddler’s pacifier while offering a soft toy and picture book, illustrating a calm weaning moment and speech-building play
    Pacifiers and Speech: When to Wean to Prevent Articulation Issues
  • Parent and toddler sitting on a living room floor playing with blocks and picture cards, making eye contact while practicing speech together in a warm, sunlit home environment
    Toddler Stuttering: Developmental Phase or Long-Term Issue?
  • Parent and toddler playing with books and toys while the parent models words; bright home setting illustrating speech and language support
    Late Talker vs. Late Bloomer: Key Differences Every Parent Should Know
  • Parent and toddler engaged in playful speech activity with a friendly speech-language pathologist observing in a bright home setting
    Tongue Tie and Speech: Separating Fact from Fiction
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