Posts Tagged ‘Add new tag’

Congratulations! Another award for Baby Sign Factory

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

tt-award-communication-commended-resizedWe are delighted to announce that Baby Sign Factory are the highly commended winner in the communication category in the Talking Tots Toy Awards 2009.

Talking Tots…helping children to communicate with confidence


Teaching your baby using Bamba

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

Don’t expect your baby to produce accurate signs straight away. Accept his version, respond appropriately ie show him ”Bamba” if he roughly signs Bamba correctly, or if he signs “drink” show him the bottle and  model the correct version for him.
It may take several weeks or a couple of months for your baby to learn their new signs; don’t give up babies love repetition.
Your baby will gradually stop using signs and use speech only as his verbal communication becomes more proficient. Unless of course there’s a younger sibling when he will start signing to the new baby and then you’ve already got a head start.
When your baby makes the sign praise him and encourage him to make the sign again. Plenty of smiles will help. Let him know you’ve understood for example say okay let’s get you some food and a  repeat the sign.

 

Amanda


Baby signing on Facebook

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Baby Sign Factory has joined Facebook. Please check out our new profile at http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#/group.php?gid=96717153968


Video of baby signing also at myspace

Monday, May 25th, 2009

http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=56365442 to watch the video of bamba the signing monkey.


Bamba baby signing in video action

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Baby sign language video at http://fr.truveo.com/baby-sign-language-using-Bamba/id/665500756


Bamba at the National Waterfront Museum – Swansea

Monday, May 25th, 2009

–“We had a fantastic morning in the National Waterfront Museum in Swansea .Thanks to everyone who came along to practice baby signing-we got some great photos .The Museum is well worth a visit if you are in the area. Many Thanks to Delyth for inviting us .Hope to be there again later in the year “

Yvonne


Using the box

Monday, May 4th, 2009

Try to return the objects to the box at the end of playtime.dara-4-resized

These are specially designed toys for a special time with your baby.

Yvonne


Welcome to the Baby Signing Gallery

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

We’d love to receive any photos of your child playing with Bamba or using baby signing or both. Please send any photos to info@babysignlanguage.org and we will upload to the site (with your permission) 

 

Yvonne


Parents who use gestures/baby signing give their children a head-start

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

Article taken from The Times February 13, 2009 Written by Times Science Editor, Mark Henderson

“Gesture effect” points to head start for toddlers

Parents who point and use other gestures with their toddlers can give them a head start with learning language, scientists have discovered.

New research in the United States has revealed that young children who pick up gestures from their parents at 14 months have larger and more complex vocabularies when they start school.

As well-educated parents from higher income brackets use more gestures with their babies, the findings help to explain why children from these families develop speech more quickly than those born into lower socio-economic groups.

The gesture effect may also have a lasting influence on children’s intellectual development, because a child’s vocabularly at the start of school is a strong predictor of later academic success.

Meredith Rowe, of the University of Chicago, who conducted the research with her colleague Susan Goldin-Meadow, said the results suggested that parents should be encouraged to point and use their hands when interacting with their children.

“If there is any way to encourage children to gesture to things more before they can speak, that could be useful,” she said. “Talk to your children more, gesture more.” Details of the research were presented yesterday at the American Association for the Advancement of Science conference in Chicago, and are published in the journal Science.

While it was already known that children whose parents talk to them more as toddlers develop language more quickly, the new research is the first to suggest that parental gestures are also important.

The reason may be that by learning to point at things, children become better at connecting words to objects. “Child gesture could play an indirect role in word learning by eliciting timely speech from parents,”

the scientists wrote in their paper. “For example, in response to her child’s point at the doll, mother might say, ’yes, that’s a doll,’ thus providing a word for the object that is the focus of the child’s attention.” In the study, the Chicago team videotaped 50 families from different socio-economic groups for 90-minute sessions, all of whom had a toddler aged 14 months. They recorded details of how often both children and their parents spoke and used gestures.

Children from higher income families used gestures to convey an average of 24 different meanings over 90 minutes, while those from less privileged socio-economic groups conveyed only 13 meanings. This was attributable to greater parental use of gesture.

All the children were then assessed again at the age of four and a half

(54 months), when they were starting school.The children who had gestured more at the age of 14 months had significantly bigger vocabularies.

Differences between children’s gestures were obvious at 14 months, even though children at that age showed no clear differences in vocabulary or speech.

“At 14 months of age, children are in the very early stages of productive language, they are saying very few words,” Dr Rowe said. “We didn’t see any differences in their spoken language but we did see difference in their gestures.

“It is striking that, in the initial stages of language learning when social economic status differences in children’s spoken vocabulary are not yet evident, we see social economic status differences in child gesture use.

“Children typically do not begin gesturing until around 10 months. Thus, social economic status differences are evident a mere four months, and possibly even sooner, after the onset of child gesture production.” Dr Goldin-Meadow said the gesture effect could have a long-lasting effect on children’s development. “Vocabulary is a key predictor of school success and is a primary reason why children from low-income families enter school at a greater risk of failure than their peers from advantaged families,” she said.


Speak and Sign

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

 Always speak and use Bamba’s signs together so your baby can hear and see what you’re saying.
Make sure that your baby is looking at you so again they can see and hear you.

 

Amandabambas-spoon-im-hungry