Parenting Communication: How to Connect with Your Child at Every Age | IMS Sotogrande

Parenting communication starts long before you open your mouth. It starts in how you approach, how much space you give them to think, whether you truly listen or just wait for your turn to speak. Many parents tell me, ‘my child doesn’t tell me anything.’ But the real question is: have we created the conditions where they want to?
Key Points
- True listening means restraining your own urge to respond or advise.
- Parenting communication changes with their stage of development: a 3-year-old and a 10-year-old need different things.
- Everyday moments (walking, cooking, driving) are the best times to talk without pressure.
- Validating emotions isn’t giving in: it’s acknowledging what they feel before setting boundaries.
- Silence communicates too. Sometimes the most powerful thing is to sit quietly beside them.
At IMS Sotogrande, we practice this daily in the classroom. Montessori guides observe before intervening. They respond instead of reacting. And what we keep telling families who choose us from Algeciras, La Línea, or Estepona is this: the way you talk to your child today determines if they’ll seek you out when they’re a teenager.
- Why Talking to Your Child Isn’t the Same as Communicating with Them
- How Parenting Communication Changes with Your Child’s Age
- Common Mistakes That Block the Conversation
- Three Concrete Strategies to Improve Parenting Communication Starting Today
- How the Montessori Environment Influences How We Communicate
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Key Takeaways
Why Talking to Your Child Isn’t the Same as Communicating with Them
Talking is easy. Communicating requires intention. You can spend the whole day giving instructions: ‘tidy up,’ ‘eat,’ ‘hurry up.’ That’s functional speech. But real parenting communication happens when you ask something and then stay listening to the full answer, without interrupting, without judging.
A study by the American Academy of Pediatrics notes that children who grow up in environments where they are actively listened to develop better emotional regulation and social skills. It’s not about talking more. It’s about talking better.
In Montessori pedagogy, there’s a principle I find fundamental: ‘follow the child.’ This applies to conversation too. Don’t impose the topic. Don’t steer the talk towards what you need to know. Let it flow. Sometimes what they share at first has nothing to do with what’s really worrying them. But if you stay long enough, it comes.

How Parenting Communication Changes with Your Child’s Age
A 2-year-old doesn’t process the world like an 8-year-old. Trying to talk to both the same way is a common mistake. Parenting communication must adapt to their stage of development, just as we do in the Montessori classroom.
Ages 0 to 3: Communication Without Words
At this stage, children communicate through their bodies. A cry, a look, a gesture. Your job is to read those signals and respond calmly. In our Montessori Nido, we observe how the youngest children seek eye contact before making any sound. If you’re looking at your phone, that channel breaks.
The key here is to narrate what you’re doing: ‘now we’re going to change your nappy,’ ‘I’m going to cut the fruit.’ Don’t expect a verbal answer. You’re building the foundations of a relationship where your child knows their presence matters.
Ages 3 to 6: The Age of Questions
‘Why is the sky blue?’, ‘why do fish die?’, ‘do you feel sad too?’. Children this age are building their understanding of the world and use questions as tools. Answering honestly, adapting the language, strengthens trust.
In Children’s House, we work with materials that invite dialogue. A child manipulating a globe starts asking about other countries, other languages. Natural curiosity is the best engine for conversation. Don’t shut it down with curt answers or an ‘it’s complicated.’
Ages 6 to 12: Reasoning and Justice
At this age, children begin to question rules, comparing what happens at home with what they see at school or with friends. They need arguments, not impositions. Parenting communication in the Taller is based on mutual respect: we explain the reasons behind decisions and listen to their perspective.
If your 9-year-old says ‘that’s not fair,’ don’t dismiss them. Ask what seems fair to them. That dialogue is teaching them to negotiate, to express their opinion respectfully, to resolve conflicts. These are life skills.
If you’d like to see how we apply these principles in our daily practice, book a personalized school visit and discover the environment first-hand.

Common Mistakes That Block the Conversation
Sometimes we do everything possible to talk with our children and, without realizing it, create the opposite. These are the mistakes I see most in families from the Campo de Gibraltar area:
Asking ‘how was your day?’ and accepting ‘fine.’ That question is too broad. Try something specific: ‘what was the most fun part of today?’ or ‘was there a difficult moment?’. Specific questions open doors. Generic ones close them.
Getting them to start talking and then interrupting. If your child opens up and you use the moment to correct, advise, or share your own experience, they learn that opening up isn’t worth it. Listen first. Then respond. The order matters.
Using the car as a confessional.
The car can be a great space for talking, but not for deep emotional topics. You’re driving, looking ahead. Your child needs to see your face when you talk about something important. Reserve the car for light conversations.

Three Concrete Strategies to Improve Parenting Communication Starting Today
You don’t need radical changes. Small daily gestures transform parenting communication sustainably. Here are three you can start tomorrow:
1. The 10-Minute Window. Every day, dedicate 10 minutes to each child without screens, without interruptions, without an agenda. Let them decide what to do or talk about. Just be present. This sounds simple, but most families don’t do it. When you start, you notice the change within a week.
2. Name what you see, not what you judge. Instead of ‘you’re being naughty,’ try ‘I see you’re throwing toys and that worries me.’ The difference is huge. One phrase judges the person. The other describes the behaviour and opens space to talk.
3. End the day with a positive question. Before bed, ask ‘what was the best part of today?’. It’s a way to train their focus towards the good and to create a connection ritual. Many IMS families coming from Sotogrande, San Roque, or Alcaidesa tell me that moment has become the favourite part of the day.
How the Montessori Environment Influences How We Communicate
At IMS, we believe school and home should speak the same emotional language. I don’t mean the literal language (we are trilingual: Spanish, English, and German), but the tone. In a Montessori environment, we don’t shout to get attention. We don’t reward obedience with stickers. We don’t punish mistakes.
This changes everything. When a child learns in the classroom that they can make mistakes without being shouted at, they carry that confidence home. And when parents apply the same, the relationship transforms. Parenting communication stops being a battle and becomes a safe space for both.
Our founder, Olimpia Tardá, puts it this way: ‘at IMS, your child will grow up feeling heard, valued, and safe.’ That starts with how we speak to each other every day.
Frequently Asked Questions
What do I do if my teenager doesn’t want to talk to me?
It’s normal for teenagers from about 12 years old to seek more privacy. Don’t force the conversation. Keep the door open with small gestures: brief questions, genuine interest in what they like, availability without pressure. Parenting communication with teens works best when it’s an invitation, not an obligation.
Is it normal for my 4-year-old to lie?
Yes, it’s part of their cognitive development. At this age, they distinguish reality and fantasy, but not completely. Instead of punishing the lie, ask with curiosity: ‘did that really happen or did you imagine it?’. This way you work on honesty without shaming them. The AMI explains that children on this plane explore the boundaries between the real and the possible.
How can I communicate better when I’m angry?
Name your emotion out loud: ‘I’m frustrated and I need a moment.’ Walking away for 30 seconds to breathe isn’t abandoning, it’s modelling self-regulation. When you return, speak from the ‘I’ (‘I felt’) instead of the ‘you’ (‘you always’). This avoids escalation and teaches your child that feeling angry doesn’t mean losing control.
Can tantrums be avoided with better communication?
Not always. Tantrums are part of normal development, especially between 18 months and 4 years. But clear, respectful communication reduces their frequency and intensity. Anticipating changes, validating emotions before setting limits, and using short, direct phrases helps a lot at these ages.
Key Takeaways
Parenting communication doesn’t require complicated techniques. It requires real presence, non-judgmental listening, and adaptation to each stage of their development. Small daily gestures (10 minutes without screens, specific questions, naming behaviours instead of judging people) create profound changes in the family relationship.
If you’d like to see how we cultivate these skills in an AMI and NEASC accredited Montessori environment, visit us in Sotogrande. Families from Algeciras, La Línea, Estepona, and across the Costa del Sol are already part of our educational community.