Don't Teach. Talk.
How to reach children who have no language foundation — and why the first word you need to find is not yours, but theirs.
Imagine walking into a classroom — or a makeshift one under a flyover — and the children stare back at you with big, bright, completely blank eyes. Not blank because they are empty. Blank because they are waiting. They have no idea what a "lesson" is. They have never held a pencil. The word "fruit" means nothing to them. Neither does "red." And you are standing there with a lesson plan that says: Today we learn about apples.
This is not a hypothetical. This is Monday morning for thousands of volunteers and teachers working with children in India's urban slums — children aged 3 to 13 who have grown up without books, without school, and sometimes without a consistent language spoken at home. They are not slow learners. They are not broken. They are simply pre-literate — people who have built their entire understanding of the world through touch, sight, sound, and lived experience, not through words written on paper.
The problem is not with the child. The problem is with the method. We were taught to teach in a way that assumes a child already knows what a "definition" is, what a "category" is, what it means to sit still and listen. When none of those assumptions hold, the entire approach collapses. What do you do then?
The First Mistake: Starting With the Word
Here is how most people teach the word "apple" to a child who doesn't know the language:
"An apple is a fruit. It is red in colour. It is round. It is sweet."
Sounds reasonable. Now consider: what if the child does not know what "fruit" means? What if they have never been taught colour names? What if "round" is a geometric abstraction they have never encountered? You have answered a question using four words the child doesn't understand. You haven't taught them "apple." You have just taught them that learning is confusing.
This is the single biggest mistake in teaching pre-literate children: starting with the word instead of starting with the world. The word is the destination. The child's existing experience is the road you travel to get there.
The Right Starting Point: What Do They Already Know?
Before you explain anything, your job is to excavate. Dig into what the child already knows, feels, and has experienced in relation to the thing you want to teach. This is not assessment. This is conversation.
If you want to teach "apple," begin like this:
Hold up a real apple. Let them touch it. Ask: "Have you seen this before? Where?" A child from a slum neighbourhood has almost certainly seen an apple vendor on the street. The moment they say "haaan, gaadi pe hota hai" (yes, on the cart), you have your bridge. Now you are not teaching them about an apple — you are talking about something they already know, and simply giving it a name.
The learning happens in the recognition, not in the definition. The word "apple" sticks because it now has an anchor in the child's memory — the vendor's cart, the smell, the crunch they once heard. You did not pour knowledge into an empty vessel. You helped them label something they already carried.
Talk, Don't Define
There is a critical difference between defining something and talking about something.
A definition is closed. It says: "This is what this is, now remember it." A conversation is open. It says: "Tell me what you think this is, and let's figure it out together." With pre-literate children — especially those who have never been inside a formal classroom — definitions feel like commands. Conversations feel like trust.
Ask more than you tell. Ask: "Does this feel rough or smooth?" Ask: "If you could eat this, what do you think it would taste like?" Ask: "Where have you seen something that looks like this?" These questions do two things simultaneously: they activate the child's existing cognitive map, and they make the child the expert on their own experience. A child who has spent years on the streets of a city knows an enormous amount about the world — vendors, weather, vehicles, animals, food smells, human behaviour. Your job is to connect the language to the knowledge they already have, not to replace their knowledge with yours.
Use the Real, Not the Represented
A hand-drawn apple in a textbook is a representation. An actual apple is a reality. For a child who cannot yet read, there is an enormous gap between the two. Pre-literate learners make connections most powerfully through their senses — what they can touch, smell, taste, hear, and see in their immediate environment.
Bring real objects into the learning space wherever possible. A leaf, a stone, a coin, a piece of cloth, a bucket of water. Do not show pictures of vegetables — bring vegetables. Do not draw a circle and call it the sun — step outside and point at the sky. When working with children in informal or low-resource settings, the richest teaching material is the neighbourhood itself. The vegetable cart. The construction site. The monsoon puddle. The stray dog that every child in the basti already has a name for.
Research in early childhood education consistently shows that pre-literate learners make meaning most naturally through oral language supported by real, physical, tangible objects — not through printed symbols or abstract categories. The classroom wall is a prop. The street outside is the curriculum.
Story Before Grammar
Long before a child can decode a sentence, they can follow a story. This is not a skill that needs to be taught — it is hardwired into how human beings learn. Oral cultures across the world have transmitted complex knowledge — about plants, seasons, relationships, morality, history — entirely through storytelling, for thousands of years. The child sitting in front of you is already part of that tradition.
Instead of teaching the word "rain" by defining it, tell a small story:
"One day, the sky got very dark. The clouds came together — thud, thud, thud — and then... whoosh. Everything got wet. The road. The dog. Everyone ran. Do you know what that was?"
Every child in a slum will know what that was. They have lived it. They will shout the answer before you finish asking. And the word "rain" — spoken in that moment of recognition — will never leave them. Story activates emotion, and emotion anchors memory. This is not a teaching trick. It is how the human brain actually works.
Honour Their Silence and Their Language
Many of the children you will encounter have a rich inner language — Hindi, Bhojpuri, Tamil, Marathi, or a mix of many — but it may not be the language you are trying to teach them. Do not treat their native tongue as an obstacle. Treat it as a resource.
If a child knows the word for something in their home language, that is the strongest possible hook for teaching them the same word in another language. Bilingual scaffolding — saying the word in both languages, letting them translate for you, asking "how do you say this at home?" — is not a concession. It is one of the most evidence-backed strategies in language acquisition for young learners.
Similarly, silence should not be read as emptiness. A child who does not answer may be processing. A child who looks away may be remembering. Give them the time. The quietest children in a classroom are often the ones making the deepest connections.
Celebrate the Small
Progress with pre-literate children looks different from progress in a traditional classroom. A child who learns to hold a pencil correctly has achieved something significant. A child who answers a question out loud for the first time has crossed a threshold that took courage. A child who uses a new word in conversation — even once, even wrongly — is building language from the inside out.
Celebrate it all. Loudly, warmly, without qualification. Children who have grown up being overlooked by systems — schools, governments, social services — have often internalised the idea that they are not worth teaching. Every act of recognition you offer them is not just pedagogical. It is political. It says: you exist, you matter, and what you know is worth building on.
A Summary You Can Carry Into the Classroom Tomorrow
You don't need a whiteboard, a textbook, or a lesson plan to reach a child. You need patience, curiosity, and the willingness to listen before you speak. The children sitting in front of you are not blank slates. They are full of knowledge — raw, unschooled, beautiful knowledge — about the world they have already lived in. Your only job is to find the words for what they already know. Start there.




