Seven Tips to Build Your Child’s Social Competence Through Everyday Activities

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Elizabeth Sautter HeadshotElizabeth Sautter
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Seven Tips to Build Your Child’s Social Competence Through Everyday Activities

Have you ever been concerned about your child’s or student’s social abilities? Do they seem younger or more immature than other kids? Maybe they don’t get invited to birthdays or hangouts? Do they struggle to get along with other kids or work in small groups? Do they gravitate towards adults instead of their peers? Or prefer to hang along and read or play video games?

If so, he or she might need a little extra support with learning and practicing these skills. Although social competence is a complicated process, there is a lot you can do to help. Let’s start by talking about what’s involved and where many kids struggle.

To start, it encompasses multiple skills and aspects of regulation, language, and executive functioning including:

  • Being aware of emotions and managing them according to the situation at hand (emotional regulation).
    Awareness/attention to social situations and the people involved.
  • Being able to understand what is going on verbally and non-verbally, follow the rules of language, and understand that others have different thoughts than you (perspective taking).
  • Being able to listen, attain information, and use language to express yourself.
  • Hold information in your brain, initiate conversation, and plan ahead (executive functioning), and much, much more.

It’s like a complex waltz, and it is no wonder many children (and some adults) struggle with it.

If your child has a delay with emotional intelligence (see past blog), they most likely will struggle with social situations and relationships, so this is exactly where you can start. Emotional regulation is part of social competence and can’t be separated. If emotions don’t match the social situation at hand, it will change the outcome of the interaction and can have a negative impact. At the same time, a social situation can alter or affect how one feels and evoke emotions, positive or negative.

A really good example of this is taking your child to a birthday party for a classmate. Many children struggle to understand the nuances of celebrating for someone else, putting themselves and their needs on the back burner stepping into someone else’s shoes, and helping them celebrate their big day, all while putting their own emotions aside to focus on the “birthday boy” for the day. This can result in big emotions and even change the situation if a child has a meltdown because they want to open the birthday girl’s present or blow out their candles. Or maybe your child struggles to pick up on subtle social cues, take turns in conversation or play, understand sarcasm, hold personal information about others or work in groups – those are all social communication skills too.

All of these situations require social competency – which is the dance of understanding social communication, applying emotional intelligence and using the skills to meet the social-emotional goals from situation to situation.

All behavior observed by others is, in fact, social behavior, as the behavior impacts how observers feel, think, and possibly react and respond.

– Michelle Garcia Winner, MA, CCC-SLP

The key to helping kids really grasp these concepts and carry them into natural situations is to teach and practice them within daily routines and activities. I write about this in my book, wherein I give practical ideas for everyday life that work for YOUR child(ren). You can learn more here.

Here are seven simple tips to help build your child’s social competence from my book to try today:

Tip #1:

Plant yourself and your child in a public place and observe others and people watch – help him identify emotions, read social cues, and figure out what is going on. This is a great activity for a coffee shop, a busy train station, or a park.

Tip #2:

When your child asks “what’s for dinner?” Or “what should I wear today?” don’t give the specific answer. Provide coaching by asking her to look around to find the clues and see if she can make a guess by noticing what she sees, smells, and already knows about the situation. Help her learn how to look for context clues and make inferences.

Tip #3:

Prime your child by telling him what is expected ahead of time. Teach him the hidden social rules to be aware of. A good example of this is when my son was young, he would have a lot of anxiety going into new situations. So I would explain to him, to the best of my ability, what to expect. I’d tell him who would be there, how long we were planning to stay, and what was expected of him. If possible, I might even provide a photo or visual. It helped him prep his mind for what was coming, and plan ahead.

Tip #4:

Do a practice run/role-play/rehearse before the actual situation. This is a great way to help kids be ready for anything that comes their way. This can be done proactively for planning or reactively to process what already happened and learn from past experiences.

Tip #5:

Read books and watch movies and discuss what is going on with relationships and social situations. “How does Charlie Brown feel? What should he do?” This is another great way to teach kids to be aware of context clues and build up a mental library of experiences.

Tip #6:

Play nonverbal games such as Simon Says to help build awareness of nonverbal language or Telephone to practice listening and turn-taking. Kids learn best when they don’t realize it’s a lesson. Have fun and use play as much as possible.

Tip #7:

Practice conversation in a structured setting such as a dinner table to build skills in real-time. Make sure to model the skills you want to see in your child and let them know that you also make mistakes – it’s not easy and we can all learn and make improvements.

It’s easier for kids to practice when they feel safe – which is what this tip is all about. You are the person to help make them feel safe and can provide the place(s) to make that happen you are the best teacher they’ve got.

Although these skills are vast and complex, there is a lot we can do to help! The best way for children to flex their social and emotional muscles and develop these skills is with an adult who understands their needs and provides teachable moments in a compassionate, fun, and supportive way.

If you know other parents, caregivers, or educators who might be interested in this topic and how to support children, please share this information.


Elizabeth Sautter Headshot About Elizabeth A. Sautter

Elizabeth A. Sautter, MA, CCC- is a licensed speech and language pathologist and co-director and co-owner of Communication Works (CW), a private practice providing speech, language, and social therapy in the San Francisco Bay Area. She has worked with preschool to adult clients and their families since 1996 in private practice, schools, and hospitals.

Elizabeth began her career working at a school with severely impaired children with behavioral challenges. In this school, she spent eight years as part of a collaborative team whose members worked to increase functional communication with the goal of decreasing undesired behavior.

After having her own children, Elizabeth followed her professional passion for supporting those with social, self-regulation, and executive functioning (i.e. social regulation) challenges and started CW as a private center providing individual and group therapy. Following the needs of the clients and community, she began to provide parent training, school consultation, summer camps, and social hangouts in order to support the whole child, family, and community. CW is also a non-public agency (NPA) providing services to public and private schools. The CW center is now run by Seven Bridges Therapy, where Elizabeth is a consultant. CW continues to provide school-based speech, language, and social support.

To see more, view all posts by Elizabeth Sautter or view her website here makesociallearningstick.com.

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2 Comments on “Seven Tips to Build Your Child’s Social Competence Through Everyday Activities”

  1. Great tips – we did so many activities when my son was a baby and toddler that he became quite social. i am deaf so he also had to be a translator for me when I couldn’t understand what others were saying which increased his ability to work well with others.

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