What is weak syllable deletion?
Weak syllable deletion is a common phonological process in children's early speech development where they omit unstressed syllables in multisyllabic words. For example, a child might say "nana" instead of "banana" or "puter" instead of "computer". This phonological process is usually omitted by age 4.
Click on the PDFs below to access the practice pages.
Aim to practice for 5 minutes every day (or even better...practice for 2 minutes 2x a day).