Reasons to Sing With Your Child
- Music helps your child’s development of language, play and learning.
- It is fun and it makes new words and ideas easier to remember and understand
- Music involves many components of language such as speech, non-verbal responses, turn taking as well as actions/gestures
- Music can introduce children to play and expand play (e.g. Wheels on the bus)
- Music can be used to help your child during routines and play throughout the day
Music Can Help Develop the Following Language Skills:
- Learning new words and concepts
- Imitation
- Expression of thoughts and feelings (actions, facial expressions and words)
- Social skills (e.g. turn taking)
- Rhyming
- Following and giving directions
- Non verbal responses
- Learn experiences and routines
Examples of Songs and Possible Language Goals
Song | Language Goal |
Head and Shoulders | Vocabulary (e.g. body parts) |
Twinkle Twinkle | Concepts (e.g. little, up) |
If You’re Happy and You Know it | Vocabulary (e.g. clap, stomp) |
Wheels on the Bus | Nonverbal Response (e.g. gestures/actions) |
Hokey Pokey | Following Directions (e.g. put your leg in..) |
Yankee Doodle | Past Tense Verbs (e.g. went, stuck) |
Strategies to Help Maximize the Benefits of Music
Music with Early Communicators (children who are non-verbal or who are just starting to talk)
- Stop singing and wait for your child to show you that he wants more singing. He might let you know by: looking at you, bouncing, pulling on your hands, swaying, making noises
- Sing face to face
- Make songs part of your daily routine
- Sing songs with actions (e.g. Eensy Weensy spider)
- Use hand-over-hand is your child is having difficulty doing the actions
Music with Practicing Communicators (children who speak in short phrases)
- Your chid may try to fill in the actions and the words
- Pause and let you child take his turn
- Slow down so your child can truly take her turn
- Make the important words stand out
- Repeat
- Use actions and gestures
Music with Experienced Communicators (children who speak in sentences)
- Your child may sing the song by himself
- Let him sing the song in his own way
- Make up new Songs to old tunes
- Sing songs whose verses can be changed to make up many different rhymes (e.g. There was Shane, Shane dancing in the rain, in the store…)