Play Therapy: Helping Children Grow Emotionally And Socially

Play Therapy: Helping Children Grow Emotionally And Socially

Published June 17th, 2026


 


Play therapy is a form of treatment that uses play as a natural way for children to express their feelings and experiences. Unlike traditional talk therapy, which relies on language and verbal reflection, play therapy recognizes that young children often communicate and process emotions through actions, stories, and imagination. It meets children where they are developmentally and emotionally, using toys, art, and creative activities as tools to help them share what might be difficult to say in words.


Children's emotional worlds and coping skills are still forming, so their ways of understanding and expressing themselves differ significantly from adults. This makes play an essential bridge for therapists to connect with children in a safe and supportive environment. Our approach at Cherry Hill Family Therapy is guided by Michelle's three decades of experience as a Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist and Registered Play Therapy Supervisor. We focus on the relational and developmental needs of each child, helping them build emotional regulation, social skills, and resilience through play.


Understanding how play therapy supports a child's growth can help parents feel more comfortable exploring this gentle and effective approach to emotional and behavioral challenges. It offers a path for children to heal and thrive on their own terms, with sensitivity to their unique stage of development. 


How Play Therapy Works: Principles And Techniques

Play therapy starts from a simple truth: play is a child's language and toys are the words. Many children do not yet have the vocabulary, insight, or emotional control to sit on a couch and talk through their feelings. In the playroom, we use play as the natural way they express thoughts, fears, wishes, and worries.


As registered play therapy professionals, we keep the work child-centered. That means the child's pace, interests, and emotional limits guide what happens. We watch how the child uses toys, art, and stories, and we respond in ways that keep them safe while gently stretching their capacity to cope and connect.


Core Principles Of Play Therapy

  • Play as communication: A child may not say "I feel powerless," but they may bury a doll under blocks or line up soldiers. We pay attention to these patterns.
  • Emotional safety first: The playroom is structured and predictable. Limits are clear and calm, so strong feelings can come out without anyone getting hurt.
  • Developmentally sensitive: A five-year-old and a ten-year-old need different kinds of support. We adapt the level of structure, language, and type of play to fit the child's age and emotional needs.
  • Relationship-focused: Healing happens in the relationship between child and therapist. Trust, attunement, and consistent responses matter as much as any technique.

Common Play Therapy Techniques

  • Toy play: Dollhouses, figures, vehicles, medical kits, and building toys give children ways to act out family life, worries about safety, or school stress. Through this, we see themes of control, fear, care, and attachment.
  • Art and creative expression: Drawing, painting, clay, and sand trays let children show feelings without needing to explain them. The product is less important than the process and the child's experience while creating.
  • Storytelling and books: Using puppets or picture books, children tell stories that often mirror their inner world. We reflect back what we see and sometimes gently adjust the story to introduce coping skills or new outcomes.
  • Role-play and dress-up: Taking on different roles (parent, teacher, hero, villain) allows children to try out new responses, feel powerful in safe ways, and explore how others might think or feel.

Throughout each session, we observe the child's play, emotional intensity, and ability to soothe and organize themselves. With Michelle's 30 years of clinical experience in child and family therapy, we look for patterns that signal where the child feels stuck and where they are growing. Those observations guide how we respond in the moment and how we adjust the play for different developmental stages, so that over time play becomes a place of emotional healing, practice, and growth. 


Why Play Therapy Is More Effective For Children Than Traditional Talk Therapy

Traditional talk therapy assumes a person can notice thoughts, name feelings, and reflect on past events in words. Many children, especially younger ones, are still building basic language and self-awareness. They know something feels "off," but they do not yet have the vocabulary or emotional insight to explain it on command.


Developmentally, children tend to think in concrete, here-and-now terms. Abstract questions such as "Why are you anxious?" or "What do you think triggered that?" ask for skills that usually develop later. Long conversations about behavior or trauma often lead to blank stares, quick topic changes, or children saying what they think adults want to hear.


Play therapy respects those limits instead of pushing against them. Play gives a direct route to the child's inner world without requiring polished language or adult-style insight. When a child sends a figure into danger and then rescues it again and again, we see themes of fear, control, and safety in motion, not just in words.


Across the research base and in Michelle's three decades of clinical work, several patterns are clear:

  • Emotional regulation develops faster in play than in talk. In play therapy, the therapist helps the child move between tension and calm inside the play itself. Over time, the child practices tolerating big feelings and settling again, which translates to fewer outbursts at home or school.
  • Social skills grow through shared play. Turn-taking, negotiating rules, reading facial expressions, and repairing small conflicts are woven into many play therapy sessions. These are building blocks for children who struggle with peers or who come in for play therapy for relational difficulties.
  • Trauma processing is safer when it is indirect. For children with trauma histories or those receiving play therapy for autism, direct questioning often overwhelms. Symbolic play lets them approach scary material sideways, with the therapist tracking intensity and pacing so the child is not re-traumatized.

Talk therapy asks children to sit still, describe, and analyze. Play therapy meets them where their development already lives: in movement, imagination, and story. From that grounded place, change is not forced through lectures; it grows through repeated, supported experiences inside the playroom that slowly reshape how the child feels, relates, and behaves outside it. 


Play Therapy Across Childhood Developmental Stages

Development changes how a child plays, thinks, and relates. In play therapy, we track those shifts closely and adjust what we do, rather than expecting a preschooler, a school-age child, and a teen to work in the same way. Michelle's 30 years as a child and family therapist and Registered Play Therapy Supervisor shape how we match the play to each stage.


Early Childhood: Preschoolers (Roughly Ages 3-5)

Preschoolers live in a world of imagination, movement, and sensory experience. Their language and impulse control are still fragile, and many early signs a child needs play therapy show up through behavior: tantrums, clinginess, sleep struggles, toileting regressions, aggression in play, or intense separation anxiety.


For this age, we lean on:

  • Imaginative play: Dollhouses, animal figures, dress-up, and simple puppets let children express fears about separation, new siblings, daycare, or medical procedures without direct questioning.
  • Sensory activities: Sand, water, playdough, and art materials help organize big feelings through touch and movement. This often settles restless bodies and supports emotional regulation.
  • Simple, consistent limits: Clear rules about safety and kindness in the playroom create predictability, which is crucial for emotional well-being at this age.

We talk less and track more, reflecting what the child is doing and feeling in short, concrete phrases. The work focuses on safety, attachment, basic emotion words, and soothing the nervous system.


Middle Childhood: School-Age Children (Roughly Ages 6-11)

School-age children straddle two worlds: they still play, yet they also think more logically and care about peers and rules. Common struggles include school refusal, perfectionism, bullying (on either side), lying, anger outbursts, or withdrawal. Play therapy for relational difficulties with friends, siblings, or parents becomes especially relevant here.


With this group, we often introduce:

  • Structured games: Board games and cooperative activities build frustration tolerance, turn-taking, and flexible thinking. We use the game moments to practice coping with losing, waiting, or changing plans.
  • Story-based work: Children create comics, stories, or sand tray scenes with clearer plots. We highlight themes and gently explore alternative endings that model problem-solving and self-advocacy.
  • Skill-focused play: Role-plays of classroom, playground, or family scenes let us rehearse social skills, assertive communication, and conflict repair in a low-stakes way.

Language and reflection become more central, but play remains the bridge. We still honor symbolic expression while inviting more direct talk about thoughts, choices, and consequences.


Adolescence: Preteens And Teens

By adolescence, many young people resist anything that feels "babyish," yet they still need safe, indirect ways to approach strong feelings. Anxiety, depression, self-criticism, family conflict, and trauma often sit under irritability, withdrawal, or risk-taking.


For this stage, we blend elements of play therapy and talk therapy:

  • Expressive arts: Drawing, music, poetry, collage, and sand tray work give teens control over what they share and how. Themes of identity, belonging, and safety surface through their choices.
  • Symbolic activities: Card decks, metaphors, and values-based games create structure while leaving room for privacy and humor.
  • Guided conversation: We move between creative work and more direct discussion, helping teens link patterns in their art or play to real-life relationships and decisions.

Throughout adolescence, respect and collaboration sit at the center. We treat the teen as a partner in shaping sessions, while still tracking nonverbal cues and keeping a focus on emotional safety and relational health. 


When To Consider Play Therapy: Signs And Situations

Parents usually notice the first hints that something is off long before anyone uses diagnostic words. Play therapy for children becomes important when those hints shift from occasional rough days to patterns that do not ease with time, reassurance, or reasonable limits.


Some signs that a child may need extra support include:

  • Persistent behavioral struggles: frequent tantrums, explosive reactions to small frustrations, or intense defiance that feels out of proportion to the situation.
  • Emotional storms or shutdowns: repeated meltdowns, crying that seems to come from nowhere, or going "flat" and hard to reach when upset.
  • Social withdrawal or conflict: avoiding friends, refusing activities they once enjoyed, or constant fights with siblings or peers despite clear family rules.
  • Anxiety and worry: trouble separating from caregivers, ongoing school refusal, physical complaints with no clear medical cause, or rigid rituals that calm fear only briefly.
  • Changes in sleep, appetite, or play: nightmares, new bedwetting, loss of interest in favorite toys, or play that becomes stuck in the same disturbing scenes.

Certain life events also point toward the need for evaluation. Our family-focused lens means we pay attention not only to the child, but to what is happening around them. Play therapy can support healing when there is:

  • Family conflict: ongoing arguments, tense co-parenting, or a divorce or separation that leaves children caught in the middle.
  • Grief and loss: death of a loved one, changes in caregivers, or a move that breaks important attachments.
  • Trauma exposure: accidents, medical procedures, violence, or witnessing frightening events, even if the child "doesn't talk about it."
  • Developmental concerns: lagging social skills, trouble reading cues, difficulty with flexibility, or repeated problems adjusting to school expectations.
  • Emotion regulation difficulties: a child who flips from calm to rage, or who seems constantly on edge, watchful, or numb.

Early intervention matters. When we meet patterns like these sooner, play gives children a safe, developmentally matched way to work through fear, anger, and confusion before those states harden into identity or long-term coping styles. With Michelle's 30 years of experience in family and child therapy, we hold the child's relationships at the center, often involving caregivers so shifts in the playroom translate into daily life. Seeking a professional evaluation in these moments is not an overreaction; it is a concrete way to protect a child's emotional well-being and support the whole family system. 


Supporting Your Child Through Play Therapy: What Parents Can Expect

When a child starts play therapy with us, the first step is usually a parent intake meeting without the child. We listen to your concerns, gather history, and clarify what you hope will change. Michelle's 30 years as a Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist and Registered Play Therapy Supervisor guide how we shape a plan that fits your child's age, temperament, and family context.


Early sessions with the child focus on building trust. The playroom is stocked with art materials, figures, games, and sensory items, arranged so children feel invited but not overwhelmed. We set clear, simple rules about safety and respect, then let the child explore. Our role is active but not intrusive: we track themes in the play, reflect feelings, set limits when needed, and gently introduce coping skills inside the play itself.


Parents often wonder what they will know about what happens in the room. We protect the child's privacy so they feel free to express anger, fear, or confusion, while also keeping you informed about patterns and progress. Feedback usually happens through regular parent check-ins, where we share observations, discuss new behaviors at home or school, and suggest ways to respond that keep the work aligned.


Progress in play therapy rarely shows up as a child giving a neat summary of insights. Instead, we look for shifts such as more flexible play themes, quicker recovery after big feelings, and changes in how they relate to peers and caregivers. Parents may notice fewer explosive episodes, more words for feelings, or a child who sleeps or separates more easily.


Parent involvement stays central throughout. Depending on the situation, this may include occasional joint sessions, coaching on limit-setting, or practicing new strategies between visits. We see you as a partner, not an observer.


At Cherry Hill Family Therapy, we keep the environment child-friendly and family-focused: toys and art materials are within easy reach, waiting spaces are calm, and scheduling offers options for school-day and after-school hours to reduce stress on families in Cherry Hill Township. Our goal is for therapy to feel like a steady, predictable support in your week, not another pressure point.


Play therapy offers a unique path for children to express and work through their feelings in ways that fit their emotional and developmental stage. Unlike traditional talk therapy, it meets children where they are, using play as their natural language to foster emotional regulation, social skills, and healing from trauma. This approach adapts thoughtfully across childhood, recognizing the distinct needs of preschoolers, school-age children, and teens. At Cherry Hill Family Therapy, Michelle's extensive credentials and three decades of clinical experience guide a sensitive, relationship-centered approach that involves the whole family system. We understand that early, developmentally attuned intervention can make a meaningful difference in a child's growth and well-being. If you notice signs that your child might benefit from extra support or want to explore how play therapy could help your family, we encourage you to learn more or get in touch to discuss your options.

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