Expressive Language (Using Words and Sentences)

Definition:
Expressive language is a child’s ability to communicate thoughts, needs, feelings, and ideas using words, sentences, gestures, or signs.

Simply: “What the child can say or communicate.”

  • Example: Child says, “I want juice” → this shows expressive language.

  • Note: Expressive language depends on receptive language (understanding) and speech motor skills (ability to produce sounds).


1. Why Expressive Language is Important

  • Lets the child ask for things, share experiences, and interact socially

  • Reduces frustration and behavior problems caused by inability to communicate

  • Supports reading, writing, and learning later in school

⚠️ A child may understand everything (receptive language) but struggle to express themselves, which is called expressive language delay.


2. Signs of Expressive Language Delay

  • Limited vocabulary (few words for age)

  • Cannot combine words into phrases or sentences

  • Relies only on gestures or crying to communicate

  • Difficulty answering simple questions

  • Uses “baby talk” longer than expected

Example:

  • 2-year-old says “milk” but cannot say “I want milk”

  • 3-year-old still uses 1–2 word phrases only


3. How Speech Therapy Works on Expressive Language

A. Vocabulary Building

  • Introduce new words gradually in daily routines

  • Use real objects, toys, and pictures

  • Example: “This is a ball. Can you say ball?”

B. Word Combination

  • Encourage combining words into phrases

  • Example: “Ball” → “Red ball” → “I want ball”

C. Sentence Formation

  • Expand from 2–3 word phrases to simple sentences

  • Example: “I eat cookie” → “I want to eat cookie”

D. Modeling & Expansion

  • Parent or therapist repeats the child’s attempt and expands it

  • Example:

    • Child: “Car”

    • Adult: “Yes, red car is fast!”

E. Storytelling & Role-Play

  • Encourage child to describe actions, events, or pictures

  • Example: “What is the boy doing?” → “Boy running” → expand to “The boy is running fast”

F. Functional Communication

  • Teach phrases for needs, wants, feelings

  • Example: “I want water,” “Help me,” “I’m happy”

G. Gestures + Words

  • For children with limited speech, gestures, signs, or PECS are combined with words

  • Eventually, words replace gestures


4. Therapy Techniques

Technique How it Helps Example
Modeling Shows correct speech Child: “Car”, Adult: “Red car”
Expansion Teaches longer sentences Child: “Eat”, Adult: “I want to eat cookie”
Play-based learning Encourages spontaneous speech Pretend tea party → “I want tea”
Repetition/drills Builds correct articulation Practice “ba, ball, bat”
Story & picture description Improves sentence building Describe picture → “The dog is running”

5. Parent Role in Expressive Language

  1. Talk to your child constantly → describe your actions

  2. Pause and give time for child to respond

  3. Avoid completing sentences for them

  4. Praise attempts, not just correct words

  5. Use real objects and routines → “Brush your teeth,” “Open the door”


6. Progress Milestones (Expressive Language)

Age Expressive Language Typical Skills
12 months 1–3 words, babbling with intent
18 months 10–20 words, points + names objects
2 years 2–3 word phrases, ~50 words
3 years Simple sentences (3–4 words), understandable to strangers
4 years 4–5 word sentences, tells simple stories
5 years Correct sentences, explains ideas, asks questions

7. One-Line Summary

Expressive language is about using words, sentences, and gestures to communicate, and speech therapy develops it through modeling, expansion, play, and functional communication.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *