A rich language environment has an essential impact on the rapid development of your child’s cognitive abilities (brain development). Communication and language support personal, social, and emotional development because your four year old can communicate feelings, needs, and ideas, as well as develop a strong sense of self-awareness.
At four, your child uses more than 1,500 different words, knows about 4,000 words, and understands even more.
Words four year olds speak and understand fall into four categories:
1. Connecting words, such as when and but—“When I grow up, I am going to play soccer.”
2. Words that explain emotions, such as upset and angry—“I am angry at you.”
3. Words that explain something that is on his mind, such as remember—“Remember, Mom took us to the park? We played on the rocket slide.”
4. Words that explain where things are, such as on top of and below — “The cat is on top of the car.”
Connecting words come from your child’s increased language development. He now has the ability to connect words and make a sentence or statement using those words.
Emotion words come from your four year old’s social-emotional development. Your four year old is showing you how he uses words to express feelings as opposed to acting out those feelings.
Words about things on his mind come from having a better understanding of what he recalls and how well he can remember events from the past.
Using words about where objects or people are shows your four year old’s growth in spatial development and his ability to see the location of objects around him.
Retell Stories
For your child to retell stories, he must tap into his creative and imaginative skillsets to recreate the story.
Children are taking everything that they have learned in the past and applying it to present skills they are developing, which prepares them for learning new skills in the future.
Remember to give yourself praise and encouragement for supporting your child’s language growth.
A child’s growth in language is one of the most obvious manifestations of cognitive development, and it provides great joy to parents as they watch it progress.