top of page

How to Improve Communication With Your Child: Practical Tips for Parents

  • Writer: Judy Rudny, LCSW
    Judy Rudny, LCSW
  • 2 hours ago
  • 3 min read

Updated: 3 minutes ago

Communicating with your child can feel challenging at times. As children grow and develop, they are learning how to express emotions, communicate their needs, build confidence and navigate relationships.


For parents, this stage can bring frustration, confusion and concern. You may feel like your child is shutting down, becoming defiant or reacting strongly to everyday situations. While this can be difficult, communication can improve with patience, consistency and a willingness to approach conversations differently.


Here are practical tips for improving communication with your child.


Listen Before Responding

Children are more likely to open up when they feel heard rather than immediately corrected. Before offering advice or jumping into problem-solving, try listening fully.


Instead of immediately responding, consider saying:

  • "I hear what you're saying."

  • "That sounds really frustrating."

  • "Tell me more about that."


Listening does not mean agreeing with everything your child says. It simply shows that you are trying to understand their experience before responding.


Choose the Right Time to Talk

Important conversations rarely go well when emotions are already high. If your child is angry, upset or overwhelmed, it may be better to pause and revisit the conversation later.


Try talking during lower-pressure moments, such as:

  • In the car

  • While taking a walk

  • During a casual meal

  • While doing an activity together


Children often communicate more easily when the conversation feels natural and low-pressure.


Avoid Turning Every Conversation Into a Lesson

Parents naturally want to guide their children, but children may become discouraged if every conversation turns into advice, correction or criticism.


Sometimes the goal is simply connection.


If your child shares something small, resist the urge to turn it into a lecture. Responding with curiosity and calm interest can make it more likely they will come to you with bigger concerns later.


Validate Feelings Without Excusing Behavior

Children need to know their feelings are valid, even when their behavior requires boundaries.


For example:

  • "I understand you're upset, but yelling is not okay."

  • "I can see this matters to you. Let's talk about it respectfully."


This approach helps children learn that emotions are acceptable, while also reinforcing healthy communication and accountability.


Ask Open Ended Questions

Questions that can be answered with "yes," "no" or "fine" often end the conversation quickly.


Instead, try open-ended questions such as:

  • "What was the best part of your day?"

  • "What has been stressing you out lately?"

  • "How are things going with your friends?"

  • "What do you wish I understood better?"


The goal is not to interrogate, but to invite conversation.


Stay Calm During Difficult Conversations

Children often test boundaries and express emotions strongly. When parents respond with anger or panic, conflict can escalate quickly.


Staying calm does not mean being passive. It means modeling the emotional regulation skills you want your child to develop.


If needed, take a short break and say:

  • "I want to talk about this, but I need a few minutes so we can have a better conversation."


That models healthy conflict management.


Focus on the Relationship, Not Just the Problem

When parents are worried, it is easy to focus only on behavior, school, screen time, chores or attitude. While those issues matter, the relationship matters too.


Look for small ways to connect outside of conflict:

  • Show interest in their hobbies

  • Spend one-on-one time together

  • Notice effort, not just outcomes

  • Offer encouragement

  • Let them know you enjoy being with them


A stronger relationship can make difficult conversations easier over time.


Looking for Additional Support?

If communication with your child feels strained, stressful or overwhelming, support is available.


Parenting can bring unique challenges, especially when family conflict, anxiety, school stress, emotional outbursts, behavioral concerns or communication difficulties are involved.


Serenity Path Therapy provides Parenting Support and Child & Adolescent Therapy to help families improve communication, strengthen relationships and develop practical strategies for supporting children and building healthier family dynamics.


Contact Serenity Path Therapy to learn more or request an initial consultation.


Final Thoughts

Improving communication with your child takes time. Progress may happen slowly, and some conversations will go better than others.


The goal is not perfect communication. The goal is to create a relationship where your child feels heard, respected and supported while learning healthy communication skills and emotional regulation.


With patience, consistency and support, parents and children can build stronger communication and a more connected relationship.

bottom of page