Question

A friend’s child has recently started to exhibit a stuttering phenomenon while speaking, which was previously unnoticed. How should one treat a child’s stuttering?

Answer

Treating a child’s stuttering first involves addressing social factors, ensuring that classmates do not overly focus on their speech defect, avoid mimicking or mocking to prevent exacerbating the stuttering symptoms. Parents should provide adequate care to the child, alleviate their tension, and conduct speech correction to encourage the child not to fear speaking. At school, teachers should reduce tense interactions with the child to help them ease their stuttering. Additionally, through language training, children can practice speaking in a natural environment, gradually transitioning to fluent expression, and reducing fear when interacting with strangers in the future. These methods can help improve the child’s stuttering condition, making their speech more relaxed and natural.