Toddlers who stutter
For a parent, it is a big shock when their young toddler starts
to stutter. What to do next is hard to decide, whether to seek
help from a stutter specialist or to hope it is just a phase.
I met a lady who was thirty and her little boy aged four had had
a stutter for quite a while. She had taken him to speech therapy
and was extremely anxious as to why he had started to stutter.
It had possibly started because the toddlers father had quite a
severe stutter, the boy may of picked up his stutter this way.
Many other people contact me asking why their toddler has
developed a stutter and asking what forms of stutter treatments
are available.
I always suggest that they keep as patient as they can and try
to play games, speech games with their child. They can challenge
the child to say the word fluently, they show their child how it
should be said and then challenge them to do the same. When they
do manage to say that particular word fluently they then heap
lots of praise onto the child, telling them how clever they are
and how proud mommy and daddy are of them. I even advise giving
them a reward like a small chocolate bar.
If instead of being patient, parents or relatives are
aggressive, saying things like:
"Get your words out boy"
"Spit it out!"
These types of comments can have a very negative effect and make
that child withdraw into their shell. This may to some people
seem very obvious to say, however you would not believe the
amount of people who have told me this is what they were told as
an infant.
Stephen Hill