Könyv Words Will Come Sarah Elizabeth Whitmore

Words Will Come

The Calm, Complete Parent's Guide to Late-Talking Toddlers-From First Worries to Early Intervention, Speech Therapy, and At-Home Strategies That Build Language

Nyelv: Angol
Kötés: Puha kötésű
Elérhetőség: Várható készletfeltöltés
Küldés 13. 07. 2026
5 517 Ft
"18 months and not talking" is one of the most-searched phrases in parenting. The families who type...

Információk a könyvről

Nyelv
Angol
Kötés
Könyv - Puha kötésű
Kiadva
2026
oldal
124
EAN
9798186449225
Enbook ID
53208308
Súly
178
Méretek
152 x 229 x 7

Teljes leírás

"18 months and not talking" is one of the most-searched phrases in parenting. The families who type it are worried, often exhausted, and almost always in need of something the internet cannot provide: a complete, calm, practical guide to what late talking actually is, what to do about it, and what comes next.

Words Will Come: The Calm, Complete Parent's Guide to Late-Talking Toddlers is that guide. Written for the parent who has been told to "wait and see" and who suspects that waiting is not the right answer -- and for the parent who already knows something is off and is looking for a clear path forward -- this book provides the complete picture that no single pediatrician appointment, parenting forum, or developmental checklist has been able to offer.

This book explains what the milestone charts actually mean and what the range of typical development looks like. It explains when to pursue evaluation and how to navigate the process if the pediatrician recommends waiting. It walks families through the Early Intervention system from the first phone call to the IFSP meeting and beyond. It explains what speech-language pathologists do with toddlers, what effective therapy looks like, and how parents can be full partners in the intervention. It provides concrete, evidence-based at-home strategies -- following the child's lead, the pause and wait technique, commenting rather than questioning, narrating the routine -- that fit into real daily life and make a real difference. It addresses bilingualism, screen time, the gender myth, and the family members who mean well and say the wrong things. It provides honest, grounded information about the conditions that sometimes underlie late talking: childhood apraxia of speech, autism spectrum disorder, and developmental language disorder. And it addresses the emotional reality of this experience: the guilt, the 3 AM worry, the comparison trap, the grief of the expected child, the strain on partnerships, and the specific isolation of a worry that the people around you rarely understand.

Through the stories of five composite families -- Mia and her son Oliver; Keisha and her daughter Zara; Priya, whose son Eli is in a bilingual household; Tom and his daughter Emma; and Rachel, whose twin son Noah is developing differently from his brother Liam -- the book makes the late-talking experience visible, specific, and, ultimately, navigable.

The words will come. This is the guide for the waiting, the working, and everything in between.