Pragmatics (Social Use of Language) in Speech Therapy
Definition: Pragmatics is the ability to use language appropriately in social situations.
Simply: “Knowing how, when, and with whom to talk.”
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Focuses on social communication, not just words or sounds.
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Includes conversation skills, turn-taking, gestures, eye contact, and understanding social rules.
1. Why Pragmatics is Important
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Helps children interact successfully with peers and adults
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Prevents misunderstandings
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Supports friendships, classroom learning, and daily routines
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Especially important in autism, but also useful for children with speech or language delays
⚠️ A child may have clear speech (good articulation) and vocabulary (expressive language) but struggle to communicate socially.
2. Signs of Pragmatic Language Delay
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Difficulty starting or maintaining conversations
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Poor eye contact during communication
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Cannot take turns in conversation
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Talks too much or too little without reading social cues
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Doesn’t adjust language for different listeners
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Difficulty understanding jokes, sarcasm, or figurative language
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Limited gestures (pointing, waving, nodding)
3. How Speech Therapy Works on Pragmatics
A. Turn-Taking & Conversation Skills
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Practice back-and-forth interactions
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Example: Play “give-and-take” games with toys, blocks, or cards
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Therapist models simple conversation:
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Child: “Ball”
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Adult: “Yes, red ball! Do you want to throw it?”
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B. Eye Contact & Non-Verbal Communication
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Encourage looking at speaker while listening
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Use games: “Peek-a-boo,” “Guess who is talking?”
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Pair gestures with speech: wave, nod, point
C. Topic Maintenance
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Teach staying on topic during conversation
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Example: Look at picture book → ask child to describe → prompt to add details
D. Social Scripts & Role-Play
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Practice common social situations:
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Greetings: “Hi, how are you?”
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Requests: “Can I play with you?”
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Sharing: “Your turn, my turn”
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Helps children generalize skills to real-life situations
E. Understanding Emotions & Perspectives
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Teach recognizing emotions in others: happy, sad, angry
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Encourage responses appropriate to feelings
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Example: “Your friend is sad, what can you say?” → “Are you okay?”
F. Pragmatic Language Games
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Board games: teach turn-taking, waiting
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Storytelling games: build narratives with peers
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Guessing games: “What am I?” to encourage asking questions and listening
4. Parent Role in Pragmatics Therapy
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Model social language in daily routines
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Encourage child to greet, ask, or comment
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Play interactive games with siblings/friends
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Use positive reinforcement for appropriate social behavior
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Avoid correcting too much – focus on successful communication
5. Progress Milestones (Pragmatics)
| Age | Typical Skills |
|---|---|
| 12–18 months | Points, gestures, shares attention |
| 18–24 months | Brings objects to show, simple comments |
| 2–3 years | Takes turns in conversation, simple questions |
| 3–4 years | Maintains topic, responds to others’ emotions |
| 4–5 years | Adjusts language for listener, uses polite forms, tells simple stories |
Note: Children with autism or social communication disorder may need long-term, structured practice.
6. One-Line Summary
Pragmatics is about using language effectively in social situations, and speech therapy builds these skills through role-play, games, modeling, and real-life practice.
