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One of the unexpected gifts of homeschooling is how much time you spend with your child. You see them across the full arc of their day — during lessons, at the lunch table, when they're frustrated, when they're in their element. You notice things that a teacher with twenty-five other students never would.
That close observation is an advantage. But only if you know what to look for.
Speech-language therapy covers a much wider range of skills than most parents realize. It's not only about pronunciation or stuttering. It includes language comprehension, expressive language, social communication, reading and writing, and the ability to organize and express thoughts. Here's what to watch for in each area.
Articulation: how speech sounds
Articulation refers to the clarity of spoken sounds. Some sound errors are completely normal at certain ages. Others linger longer than expected and affect how well your child makes themselves understood.
Signs worth noting: speech that's consistently hard for unfamiliar people to understand; substituting sounds well past the typical age (saying "wabbit" for "rabbit" past age 5 or 6); leaving sounds off the ends of words; your child getting frustrated or going quiet when they can't make themselves understood.
That frustration piece matters. A child who stops trying to communicate because it's too hard is a child who needs support — not more time to "catch up."
Language: understanding and expression
Language runs in two directions. Receptive language is what your child understands. Expressive language is what they can communicate.
For receptive language, watch for: consistent difficulty following multi-step directions even when your child is calm; struggling to understand "why," "when," or "how" questions; needing instructions repeated more than typical attention issues would explain.
For expressive language, watch for: vocabulary that seems limited for their age; short, simple sentences when peers are using more complex language; difficulty telling a coherent story about something that happened; lots of filler words while searching for the right one; giving one-word answers when more is expected.
Neurodivergent kids often develop in uneven patterns. A child who reads fluently but can't narrate what they read, or who has a large vocabulary but can't carry on a back-and-forth conversation, may have a language processing difference worth exploring.
Social communication: the layer most families miss
Social communication — called pragmatics by SLPs — is the ability to use language appropriately in social situations. This is one of the areas most commonly associated with autism and ADHD, but it can affect any child.
Signs to watch for: difficulty staying on topic in a conversation; talking at length about a favorite subject without reading cues the other person has checked out; struggling with back-and-forth exchanges; taking language very literally and missing sarcasm or idioms; avoiding eye contact or missing facial expressions and body language.
Many homeschooling parents recognize this as something they've been managing instinctively for years — bridging gaps in social interactions, coaching conversations, prompting turn-taking. That effort is real, and a good SLP can give your child tools that make those things feel less effortful.
Fluency: when speech doesn't flow smoothly
Watch for: repetitions of sounds, syllables, or whole words; prolonged sounds; visible physical tension when trying to speak — blinking, jaw tightening, a slight struggle before words come out; your child avoiding speaking situations they used to be comfortable in.
Stuttering is something where early, play-based intervention makes a meaningful difference. The longer it goes unaddressed, the more avoidance behaviors build around it.
Reading and writing: the language connection
SLPs also work on literacy. Reading and writing are language-based skills, and many children who struggle with decoding, spelling, or written expression have an underlying language processing difference a speech therapist can address directly.
Watch for: persistent difficulty with phonics despite explicit instruction; struggling to blend sounds to read words; strong avoidance of writing tasks; difficulty getting thoughts onto paper even when the child clearly knows what they want to say. Dyslexia in particular is a language-based learning difference, not a vision problem — and an SLP is often the right person to address it.
What to do if something feels off
You don't need a diagnosis to see a speech-language pathologist, and you don't need to wait until you're certain something is wrong. If any of this sounds familiar, the next step is simple: get an evaluation.
Coral Care matches homeschooling families with licensed, play-based SLPs who come to your home and work within your school routine. They assess your child's speech and language skills, give you a clear picture of where they are, and build a personalized plan around your specific child — their interests, their pace, your schedule.
Insurance covers it for most families. Coral Care verifies your coverage before the first visit so there are no surprises. Most families are matched within a few days.
Many families who come to Coral Care say the same thing: they noticed something was off for a while before they acted on it. The ones who moved sooner are glad they did.
Find a speech therapist near me — free to start, insurance verified before your first visit.




