Wednesday, 7 October 2015

LANGUAGE LEARNING







BABY TALK is the undignified, high-pitched talk that comes naturally to some parents when referring to a baby. Notice I said some because some others feel like absolute idiots! 

Though the baby will learn your language even if you never learn his, his speech will develop faster and better if you make a conscious effort at early communication. Babies who aren’t communicated with at all suffer not just in language development but in all areas of growth.

But that rarely happens. Even the parent who’s bashful about baby talk communicates with his or her baby all day long _ while cuddling him, responding to his crying, singing him a lullaby, saying: “It´s time for a walk”, or muttering, “Oh, not the phone again!”
Parents teach language when they talk to each other as well as when they talk to their baby. Babies pick up almost as much from second-hand dialogue as they do when they’re part of a conversation.

Some popular baby talk words are for example, “boo boo”, for when the baby has a wound, a scratch, or a bruise; and “bee bo” for belly button.


BABY’S FIRST WORDS

Just when a baby makes the transition from sounds that mimic real words but have no meaning to meaningful speech is difficult to pinpoint exactly.
Some babies find easier the consonant D or M (mummy, daddy).
When the first real word is spoken varies a great deal. According to the experts, the average baby can be expected to say what she means and mean what she says for the first time anywhere between ten and fourteen months. (word level)
A small percentage of children start a couple of months earlier and some perfectly normal babies don’t utter a single recognizable word until midway through their second year.

Long before the baby utters her first word, she will be developing her linguistic skills:

-          First by learning to understand what is said. This receptive language starts developing at birth, with the first words the baby hears.
-          Gradually she begins to sort out individual words from the jumble of language around her,
-          and then one day, about the middle of the first year , you say her name and she turns around. She’s recognized a word!
-          Pretty soon thereafter she should begin to understand the names of other people and objects she sees daily, such as, mummy, daddy, bottle, cup, water, biscuit
-          In a few months she will begin to follow simple commands, such as wave bye bye, kiss mummy.

Here are some hints on how to help develop a baby’s language:

  1. Label, label, label! Verbally label objects in baby’s environment (bath, changing table, nappy, mat, cot, chair, and so on) Play “eyes-nose-mouth” (take baby’s hand and touch your eyes, your nose, and your mouth, kissing the hand at the last stop). Don’t leave out people! point at other care takers, teachers, babies…
  2. Listen, listen, listen! As important as what you say to the baby is how much you let your baby say to you. Even if no words are identified yet, listen to his/her garbled speech and respond: “Oh, that’s very interesting!”, or “Is that so?”
  3. Concentrate on concepts. Be sure to say the word for the concept as you and baby act it out.
-          Hot and cold: let baby touch the outside of his/her warm bottle, then an ice cube; or cold water, then warm water.
-          Up and down: gently lift baby up in the air, then lower to the ground;
-          Stand and sit: hold babies hand and help him/her stand, then sit down together (use ring-a-ring o’ roses to help with this concept)
-          Wet and dry: compare a wet wipe/flannel and a dry towel.
-          Big and little: Set a large ball beside a small one; show baby that you are big and baby little in the mirror.
  1. Become colour conscious. Start identifying colours whenever is appropriate. “See, that balloon is red just like your shirt” or “That truck is green, your socks are green too”
  2. Urge baby to talk back.Do you want bread or crackers?”, “Do you want the red or the blue dummy?”. Get baby to help you locate things: “Can you find the ball?”
  3. Keep directions simple. Sometime around the first birthday most toddlers can begin following simple commands, but only one step at a time. Instead of “Please, pick up the spoon and give it to me”, try “Please, pick up the spoon”, and when that’s been done, add “Now, please, give the spoon to Daddy”.
  4. Correct carefully. When a baby mispronounces a word use a more subtle approach to say it correctly to protect the baby’s ego. If the baby says “pelota blue”, respond with, “That’s right. It’s a blue ball”.
  5. Think numerically. Counting may be a long way off for the baby, but the concept of one or many isn’t. Comments like “Here, you can have one biscuit”, or “Look, see how many bubbles!” Count or recite, “One, two, buckle my shoe..” Integrate counting into the baby’s life when you do sit-ups with him or when you’re feeding him with the spoon..
                       

USING BABY SIGNS TO COMMUNICATE

Sign language, once used only among the deaf, is becoming a popular form of communication between children who can hear but can’t yet speak and their parents, who are anxious to understand them.

Preverbal babies have always used hand gestures and motions in an effort to express what they weren’t able to through speech. Like ei. waving to let his parents know that he wants to go bye bye, or out and about!

Hand games, like “pat a cake”, and finger songs, like “Incy Wincy Spider”, have been favourites for generations because they allow babies to play along even though they’re not able to sing along.

Baby signing offers many advantages:

-          it increases comprehension
-          it decreases frustration and therefore tantrums.
-          bolsters a child’s self-esteem by making him feel more confident.
-          this confidence translates in an increased motivation to speak

The advantages of baby signing, however, seem mostly to be short term.
Once a child can speak and be understood, the benefits of having used signs diminish and eventually disappear.

How to use baby signs:
-          Get an early start on signing. Begin as soon as your baby shows an active interest in communicating with you. At least by eight or nine months. Most babies will start signing back somewhere between ten and fourteen months.
-          Sign what comes naturally for you and the baby. Any simple gesture that fits a word or phrase well can work. For example: flapping arms for bird, scratching under the arms for monkey, hand together and supporting a tilted head for sleep, a rubbed belly for hungry, a finger touched to the nose for smell
-          Give the baby the signs he needs. The most important signs are the ones your baby requires to express his everyday needs, such as hunger, thirst and fatigue.
-          Sign consistently. By seeing the same signs over and over, the baby will come to understand them and imitate them quickly.
-          Speak and sign at the same time. To make sure the baby learns both the sign and the spoken word, use both together.
-          Follow the baby’s signs. Many babies invent their own signs. If they do use the sign of their desire.
-          Don’t push the signs. Signing like any other form of communication should develop naturally and at a child’s own pace. If the baby seems frustrated don’t force the agenda.


GAMES BABIES PLAY (improve socialization)

-          Peekaboo. teaches such concepts as object permanence. “Where’s mummy/ Noemí?” then uncover your face and say “pekaboo I see you!” Be ready to repeat until you collapse. Most babies have a voracious appetite for this game.
-          Clap hands. As you sing “clap, clap, clap your hands, clap your hands together” or any other ditty take the babies hands and show her how to clap. Can add a hiding game: “clap your hands, one two three, play a clapping game with me. Now your hands have gone away, find your hands so we can play!” The pat a cake rhyme is very appropriate too.
-          The itsy bitsy spider. Thumb and pointer fingers.
-          This little piggy went to market. This little piggy went to market, this little piggy stayed home, this little piggy had roast beef, this little piggy had none and this little piggy cried wee, wee, wee, all the way home!
-          How big is baby? or how big another student and then help the child spread his or her arms as wide as possible and exclaim “So big”
-          Eyes, nose, mouth, kiss! Take both baby’s hands. Nothing teaches these body parts faster!
-          Ring-a-ring o’ rosies. “Ring-a ring o’ rosies, a pocket full of posies, A-tishoo!, A-tishoo! We all fall down”.
-          One two, buckle my shoe.
-          Pop goes the weasel. Half a pound of tuppenny rice, Half a pound of treacle, That’s the way the money goes, Pop goes the weasel. www.rhymes.org.uk


READING TO BABY

It’s probably never too soon to start reading to a child!
But it isn’t until the second half of the first year that a baby becomes an active participant in the reading process, if only by chewing on the corners of the book to start with. (Bath books are ideal at this stage)
Soon she begins to pay attention to the words as you read them (at this point to the rhythm and sounds of the words rather than their meanings) and to the illustrations (enjoying the colour and patterns, but not necessarily relating the pictures to known objects)

To make sure a baby catches the bookworm early, use the following strategies:
-          Read to yourself. Children are much more likely to do as you do than to do as you say.
-          Read a few pages out loud while you nurse or give the baby a bottle,
-          read a book in her room while she plays, keep a book on your bedside table for reading before you fall asleep and for showing your baby (this is Daddy’s book)
-          At age one, a few children are ready for very simple stories, though most won’t be willing to sit still for them for several months yet. Even those who are ready can’t handle more than three or four minutes with a book at this age. You’d hold it longer if you make reading interactive, a process baby can participate fully. Stop to discuss the pictures, ask the baby to point to familiar objects and name those he hasn’t seen before. Rhymes are still favourites with babies entering their toddler years, as are books with colourful pictures.

-          Giving children the opportunity to both tell and hear stories encourages them to develop active speaking and listening skills. 
-          Storytelling fuels the imagination and allows children to develop their own mental images of the story.
-          Storytelling develops the memory
-          Storytelling is fun and exciting – and children love it!

PLAYING DVD’S

  • Oxbridge baby DVD Learn to talk
  • Baby Einstein DVD’s
 Adopted and adapted from Noemí León´s material for course 2016 Crif "Las Acacias"  



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