Attention and listening advice sheet
This is the child’s ability to focus on the speaker and listen to what is being said. A child’s attention and listening skills can affect their understanding and use of spoken language and speech sounds.
Everyday strategies to support your child’s attention and listening
- Focus your child’s attention before giving an instruction; you can do this by getting down to their level, being face to face and using their name.
- Use shorter sentences.
- Use gestures to support what you are saying and get their interest
- Create an environment with less distractions e.g. reduce background noise such as television and radio. Don’t have all of their toys available at one time. Where possible, only have a selection of toys which can be swapped every few days or once a week.
- Encourage your child to finish an activity before moving on.
- Encourage the child to find things for you and involve them during everyday tasks, e.g. getting dressed, going shopping, and putting toys away.
More Information
Activities to develop attention and listening skills
Easiest:
- ‘Ready, Steady, Go’ games: The child needs to wait for you to say “go” before they act: e.g. running a car down a ramp, rolling a ball, pressing a pop-up toy.
- Games with instruments: Make homemade instruments e.g. spoon and pan, two saucepan lids as cymbals, shakers with yoghurt pots and lentils. Play “stop – go” games with them i.e. say “go” and play the instruments then say “stop” (maybe with a hand signal as well).
- Nursery rhymes: Recite nursery rhymes and leave pauses for the child to fill in the appropriate word
- Animal noises: Make animal noises and ask your child to point to the correct picture or animal from a selection in front of them
- Ball games: All the players (at least three) sit in a circle. Before you throw or roll the ball to another player, call their name. Each time you call out the name of the person catching the ball. In this way both the child throwing and the child catching the ball will have to listen carefully to what you say.
- Ticking clock or wind up toy: Hide a ticking clock or wind up toy in one of three boxes. Get your child to close their eyes. Your child must identify which box the clock is in by listening.
Activities to develop attention and listening skills
Harder: Your child may need better language skills for some of these activities
- Shopping Games: Have an array of four or five items in a ‘shop’ e.g. egg carton, juice bottle, cereal packet, margarine tub, bag of bread and also have a shopping bag to put things in. Ask the child to go and buy e.g. the eggs and bread, increase to three items and then extend choice to four, five or six items.
- Posting Games: Have pictures of objects and ask the child to post you two, thee or more of the objects
- Musical Bumps/Statues: Listen for when the music stops and sit down or keep very still.
- Games with Instruments: Have three musical instruments. Play one sound and get the child to copy it. Then play a sequence of two and see if he/she can copy the sounds. Eventually you could make another identical set of instruments and play a sequence behind a screen. See if the child can copy the sequence without seeing the instruments.
- Simon says: The aim is for the child to follow your instructions – but only when you begin the instruction with “Simon says”. This game can be made simpler by removing the “Simon says” part. Swap roles so the child gives the instructions
- Describe a picture/Make a model: Draw a simple picture/ make a model (e.g. a tower) without the child seeing what you have done. Describe the picture to them for them to draw/make it. (E.g., “Draw a house in the middle of the page. It has got a pointed roof and a chimney.”). The aim is for the child to draw a picture/make a model identical to your own without him/her seeing it
- Make up a story: Make up a story with the child’s name in it. Every time you say his/her name, the child has to nod, stand up or put their arms up
- Make a scrapbook using photographs of people doing things or events. Encourage your child to give you a word/sentence to write underneath (depending on their language level). Sometimes this may encourage better sentences than if your child is just telling you