Helping a Child Who Stammers: A Parent Guide
Hearing your child struggle to get words out — repeating sounds, stretching syllables, or going silent mid-sentence — is worrying. You want to help but aren't sure how. Should you correct them? Finish their sentence? Wait it out?
This guide explains what stammering (stuttering) is, how to respond at home, and when stammering treatment in Pune can make a real difference.
What is stammering?
Stammering is a fluency disorder — not a sign of nervousness or low intelligence. A child might:
- Repeat sounds or syllables ("c-c-can I go?")
- Prolong sounds ("ssssnake")
- Block — mouth open but no sound comes out
- Show facial tension when trying to speak
It often appears between ages 2 and 5, when speech is developing rapidly. Some children outgrow it; others benefit from structured speech therapy.
What parents should do
- Listen with patience — maintain natural eye contact and wait for them to finish
- Slow your own speech — not dramatically, but calmly. Children mirror adult pace
- Reduce questions — one at a time, with pauses
- Give undivided attention when they want to talk — put the phone down
- Normalise turn-taking — everyone waits their turn in conversation
- Praise content — focus on what they said, not how fluently they said it
What to avoid
- Finishing their sentences — it increases pressure
- Saying "slow down," "relax," or "think before you speak"
- Correcting or interrupting when they stammer
- Showing frustration or hurry
- Discussing the stammer in front of them with others
- Limiting speaking opportunities ("don't talk unless you can say it smoothly")
Your calm response is one of the most powerful tools you have.
When to seek fluency therapy
Consider an assessment if stammering:
- Lasts more than 6 months from when it first appeared
- Persists beyond age 4
- Is getting worse over time
- Affects confidence — avoiding talking, whispering, or staying quiet
- Includes physical tension (jaw clenching, head movements)
- Runs in the family
Early fluency therapy teaches children gentle speech techniques and builds confidence before avoidance habits form.
What happens in stammering therapy?
At Hope CDC in Kharadi and Dhanori, speech-language pathologists use play-based fluency work — easy onset, relaxed breathing, pacing — never punitive drill. Parents learn supportive listening strategies for home and school.
Stammering is different from speech delay (not enough words) and articulation problems (unclear sounds). Some children have more than one — we assess all areas.
Stammering at school
Share strategies with teachers: allow extra time to answer, don't call on the child unexpectedly, and avoid timed reading aloud until confidence builds. Our therapists can provide a brief note for school if helpful.
Book a free fluency assessment
You don't need to wait and hope. If stammering is affecting your child, Hope CDC offers a free initial assessment — compassionate, child-friendly, and pressure-free.
Learn more about stammering treatment or book today using the button on this page.