

Overview
Parents are the most important people in a child’s
life. One of the greatest gifts parents give their children is helping
them learn to communicate so they can connect with the world.
The ability to communicate and use language, whether through gesture,
sign or spoken words, is the most important skill a child will learn.
As a parent, how you interact and communicate with your child is the
key to helping her/him develop the best possible language and early
literacy skills.
Children learn to talk - not by being taught - but by being involved
in enjoyable, extended interactions with their parents and caregivers.
In other words, they learn to communicate by communicating. They watch
and listen to others. They engage with the things and people in their
lives and try to communicate about them. The responses they get when
they communicate are what help them learn. Positive, interested responses,
which build on what they have communicated, motivate them to communicate
again.
Positive responses support the child in three ways. They:
tell the child “I am interested in what you have to say”, which
motivates him to continue to communicate, increasing opportunities
to practice and learn;
provide models of how language is used by
adults, which helps him develop more advanced
language skills; and
provide information about
the world, which expands the child’s knowledge
and understanding, giving him more to communicate about
Hanen Helps Parents of Young Children
Whether you are a parent of a child with an identified
or suspected language delay or of a typically developing
child, The Hanen Centre has resources and programs that can help
you promote your child’s language and early literacy development:
i) Hanen Resources for all parents
Hanen resources include user-friendly books, videos
and other learning materials to guide families along the way. These
resources are used by parents in a Hanen Program, but they are also
available to any parent who wants information on how to use the Hanen
approach in their daily interactions with their children.
ii) Hanen Programs for parents of children with language delays
Thousands of parents of children with language delays
around the world have attended Hanen Programs, offered only by speech-language
pathologists/therapists, who have been trained and certified by attending
a Hanen workshop.
Hanen Programs are research-based and designed for small groups of
parents. They take a practical approach and help parents learn how
to foster their child's language development during everyday routines
and activities. The programs are supported by beautifully illustrated
guidebooks and inspiring videotapes that bring Hanen strategies to
life.
For more information about The Hanen Centre you can visit their website
at hanen.org.