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Parenting Article:
Milestones In Your
Baby's Language Development
By: Jackie
Durnin
Baby sign language has been shown to very beneficial to a baby's language
development. So much so, that the typical language parameters of children
are changing thanks to a child's ability to express themselves through
baby sign from as early as 6 months of age.
So how can a parent know if their child's language,
listening and speech skills are developing normally? All children develop
their language, listening and speech skills at different rates. Below
you will find a chart based on a non-signing child's typical language
development but this does not take into consideration the use of baby
sign language with children. Please note that this table is a guide
only.
| Your Child's Age |
Typical Language Development |
| By Age One: |
- Turns head toward the source of the sound.
- Watches your face when you speak.
- Responds to familiar sounds such as the car in the driveway,
the dog barking, the door bell ringing, the telephone ringing
etc.
- Responds to their name.
- Understands simple instructions such as "no".
- Tries to repeat your sounds or familiar sounds from their
environment.
- Uses one or more word with meaning.
- Babbles (says "ba-ba" or "ma-ma").
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| By 17 Months: |
- Points to objects, pictures and people.
- Most vocabulary is mainly nouns ie. People, place, animal
or thing.
- Tries to imitate easy words.
- By The Age of Two points and says the name to simple body
parts such as "nose".
- Starts to combine words such as "more milk".
- Can name a number of objects in their environment.
- Can use some pronouns such as "He", "My" or "I".
- However "My" and "I" often get confused.
- Understands simple sentences such as "show me your eyes
(nose, mouth, hair)".
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| By Age Three: |
- Speech is more accurate and they can be understood by familiar
adults.
- Uses three to four word sentences.
- Is using some past tense such as "jumped".
- Uses pronouns I, you, me correctly.
- Recognises their own needs such as hunger or thirst.
- Have favourite books and television shows.
- Knows around three prepositions such as "in", "on" or "under".
- Is using some plurals such as "socks" or "shoes".
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So how does baby sign language change the above
milestones?
The main difference is your baby's ability to begin communicating
through sign earlier than their vocal skills will allow them. By the
age of two, while non-signing babies are combining words such as "more
milk", parents of signing babies have experienced two-word communication
through baby sign language as early as 14 months of age. This is a 10-month
gap in communication. Dr Acredolo and Dr Goodwyn further highlighted
these benefits in a study where three-year-old signing children had
developed the language and vocabulary skills to a four-year-old.
This does not mean that a signing baby will necessarily
speak earlier than a non signing baby but that they will have the ability
to communicate their thoughts, wants and needs through sign while being
pre-verbal.
This ability for children to communicate their needs
and wants causes children to be less frustrated and research has shown
that it has great language development and vocabulary building benefits.
Give your child a head start in language development
with Australian baby sign language.
*Editor's Note: All children develop at their own
pace. This article is a guide only.
Article written by Jackie Durnin:
Jackie Durnin is the Author of Australian Baby Hands, communicating
with your baby using simple sign language. Visit http://www.australianbabyhands.com
where you may download you FREE
baby sign language chart.
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