Daily Routines as Practice

Speech Activities During Screen Time Breaks for a 3.5-year-old

For 3.5-year-old speech practice screen time breaks, start with one low-pressure routine, one realistic communication target, and one.

Start small

For your child, screen time breaks speech practice should feel like a tiny addition to something you already do. One word, one gesture, one AAC model, or one repeated phrase is enough to start.

What to model

Use useful, functional language: more, help, stop, go, open, all done, my turn, your turn, want it, not that. Functional words beat flashcard words because they help your child control their world.

A parent script

During screen time breaks, say the same short phrase before the same action. Pause. Watch for eye gaze, movement, sound, sign, point, or AAC. Then honor the attempt and continue.

When it is not working

If your child turns away, melts down, or stops engaging, reduce the demand. Regulation is not a bonus; it is the foundation for communication.

Related Little Words guides

Important: Little Words is educational support for home practice. It is not a medical device, not an AAC replacement, and not a substitute for a licensed speech-language pathologist, pediatrician, early intervention program, school team, or developmental evaluation.