Part of the Children with Disability NZ network:

  • Accessible Playgrounds NZ helps families find inclusive playgrounds
  • Inclusive Playground Equipment NZ helps councils, schools and communities design better ones

Inclusive Social Play Without Sound

Inclusive Social Play Without Sound

Why This Matters

Play is social.

But not all social play relies on sound.

Many children cannot rely on spoken communication. This includes deaf and hard-of-hearing children, non-verbal children, and children who communicate in different ways.

If a playground depends on sound to connect people, it excludes them.

Inclusive design must support social interaction without requiring speech.

Play Does Not Require Words

Children communicate in many ways.

This includes:

Gesture
Movement
Eye contact
Shared activity
Facial expression

Research shows that play helps children develop communication and social skills, even when verbal communication is limited

Playgrounds should support these natural forms of interaction.

Not replace them with barriers.

Design for Interaction, Not Instruction

Some playgrounds rely on instructions or verbal cues.

“Push here”
“Wait your turn”
“Follow this rule”

This creates barriers for children who do not process or use spoken language.

Inclusive design should:

Show how to use equipment
Encourage interaction through design
Allow play to happen naturally

If a child needs instructions to participate, the design is already limiting them.

Shared Play Creates Communication

The most powerful form of social play is shared experience.

Children connect through:

Playing side by side
Taking turns
Mirroring actions
Watching and copying

Inclusive playgrounds should include equipment that naturally supports shared use.

Research shows that inclusive play environments encourage interaction and social development across different abilities

Play itself becomes the communication.

Visual Communication Is Key

When sound is not available, visual information becomes critical.

This includes:

Clear visibility of how equipment works
Seeing other children play
Recognising patterns and movement

Design should allow children to understand:

Where to go
What to do
How to join in

Without needing to hear instructions.

Movement as Communication

Movement is one of the most universal forms of communication.

Swings, seesaws, and spinning equipment allow children to:

Respond to each other
Create rhythm
Share timing

These interactions do not require words.

They create connection through action.

Face-to-Face Interaction Matters

Some playground designs unintentionally block social interaction.

Children face away from each other
Equipment separates users
Positions limit eye contact

Inclusive design should support:

Face-to-face positioning
Side-by-side play
Opportunities to see and respond to others

Social connection happens when children can see each other.

Avoid Over-Reliance on Sound-Based Play

Some equipment depends on sound to create engagement.

Musical panels
Audio-based games
Call-and-response features

These can be valuable — but they should not be the only option.

If a child cannot hear the interaction, they are excluded.

Inclusive playgrounds provide multiple ways to engage.

Support Different Communication Styles

Not all children communicate in the same way.

Some may:

Use gestures
Use communication boards
Use assistive devices
Use minimal interaction

Inclusive design must allow for all of these.

Research highlights that inclusive environments should support diverse ways of interacting, including non-verbal communication and structured play

There is no single “correct” way to play.

Design for Confidence, Not Confusion

Children need to feel confident joining in.

If a play situation relies on:

Verbal coordination
Complex rules
Unclear expectations

It becomes harder to participate.

Inclusive design should make it easy to:

Observe
Understand
Join

Without needing explanation.

Social Play Without Pressure

Not all children want high levels of interaction.

Some prefer:

Parallel play (playing alongside others)
Watching before joining
Short interactions

Inclusive playgrounds should support:

Low-pressure social opportunities
Flexible engagement
Choice in how to participate

Social play should be available — not forced.

Layout Supports Interaction

Social connection is influenced by layout.

Design should:

Bring children together
Avoid isolation
Create shared spaces

Research shows that inclusive playgrounds must consider both physical and social accessibility to support real participation

If children are separated by design, interaction is reduced.

Real-World Behaviour

In real playgrounds:

Children do not announce themselves
They do not ask permission
They join in through action

Design must support this natural behaviour.

If joining requires explanation, it creates a barrier.

A Lived Experience View

From lived experience, you can see immediately whether a space supports social play.

You see:

Whether children can approach each other
Whether they can play together without speaking
Whether they feel included

If interaction depends on sound, some children are left out.

If it works without sound, everyone can join.

Final Thought

Inclusive social play does not depend on words.

It depends on design.

When playgrounds support visual, physical, and shared interaction, communication happens naturally.

When they rely on sound, they exclude.

Because inclusion is not about how children communicate.

It is about whether the environment allows them to connect.

Inclusive Social Play Without Sound
For many children — especially those who are non-verbal or use AAC (Augmentative and Alternative Communication) — the ability to communicate determines whether they can participate at all. If communication is placed at the edge of a playground, participation is also pushed to the edge. Inclusive design must bring communication into the centre of play.
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