What oral communication skills should an 18-year-old have?
Beyond academic success, friendships, and job readiness, strong communication skills are essential for thriving in adult life. Yet, they’re often overlooked.
This is the fifth and final post in our series on oral communication skills for ages 3-18. Here, we focus on the teen years, when students can refine earlier skills and develop the advanced abilities that will set them apart.
Why the Teen Years Matter for Communication Growth
The 13-18 age range covers a wide span of maturity and experience. Skills introduced at 13 can serve as the foundation for mastery by high school graduation. For example, learning the basics of problem solving and compromise as a young teen can grow into strong negotiation skills by 18.
By the time they leave high school, teens should be able to:
- Build strong interpersonal relationships: making friends, working well in teams, and getting along with diverse groups of people.
- Speak informatively, persuasively, and clearly: whether explaining a concept, sharing an opinion, or motivating others to take action.
- Support ideas with evidence: using examples, facts, stories, analogies, and quotes from credible sources
- Deliver polished presentations: confidently presenting with or without audio-visual tools.
- Participate in group projects: both as an active contributor and as an effective leader.
- Adapt to different social situations: behaving respectfully and appropriately in formal and informal settings.
- Use precise vocabulary and clear grammar: avoiding vague, repetitive, or rambling speech.
- Read aloud expressively: adjusting tone, pace, and style for different audiences.
Building Skills Step by Step
- Clear Speech: By 13, most students know the importance of clear pronunciation and steady pacing. Now, they can focus on eliminating mumbling, using varied sentence structures, and improving vocal expression.
- Persuasive Speaking: Teens can learn to craft arguments supported by stories, analogies, and expert quotes. By 18, they should be able to present a strong, well-reasoned case, even if you don’t agree with them!
- Social Confidence: Skills learned in early childhood, like greeting others politely, can grow into confidently welcoming guests, introducing speakers, or even presenting awards.
- Teamwork and Leadership: Teens should be comfortable sharing ideas, listening respectfully, and guiding groups toward solutions. They should also be adaptable, capable of being both an effective leader and a cooperative team member.
Why These Skills Matter
Strong communication skills are essential as teens step into independent life, whether heading to higher education, starting a career, or contributing to their communities.
We need articulate voices: leaders who inspire, collaborators who support, and citizens who contribute thoughtfully. By investing in these skills now, you help your teen prepare for a lifetime of confident, respectful, and effective communication.
Next Step
Want to help your teen gain the confidence to speak up and stand out? Explore our resources designed to build polished, persuasive communicators.

