Cape Argus

Teach your baby sign language

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“Baby signing” is a communicat­ion tool developed by Dr Joseph Garcia in the 1980s for use with hearing, preverbal babies, which involves teaching them keyword signing that they use before they can talk. It is similar to normal sign language, but simplified, says Yogie Semple who has been using baby sign language at her playschool in Morningsid­e for more than 10 years. From what age can I teach it? US-based parenting expert Monica Beyer has written a number of books on the topic. Her advice? Any age is good, although most parents will only begin to see results when baby is 7 months old.

Semple says they start teaching basic signs to their children from 7 months of age. How do I start? Be consistent. Use the same sign the same way for the same action or object, Beyer advises on her blog signingbab­y. com. “This will help your baby become familiar with the sign and she will be able to sign it back to you sooner.”

Semple says the three key signs are “milk”, “eat” and “more.” Teach baby the word, show them the sign and repeat until they can mimic your actions. What are the benefits? The Bub Hub & Company runs a series of workshops in the greater Joburg area.

Their baby sign language class, developed by Wits University and the Awethu Project, is a communicat­ion programme that helps babies develop their language skills through singing, signing and reading.

According to the we.can.talk programme, the benefits are: Kick-start your baby’s love of language Improve your baby’s language developmen­t

Improve baby’s IQ (by an average of 12 points) Understand your baby’s frustratio­ns Avoid temper tantrums Deepen the bond between parent and child Will it mean fewer tantrums? Durban-based mom Nazreen Majid has her hands full with two toddlers and she swears by it.

“It eliminates the frustratio­n of not knowing what my kids want,” she says.

Her daughter started signing at 16 months and her son at 18 months when they were taught at Yogie’s Play School.

“They know the signs for ‘bath’, ‘please’, ‘thank you’, ‘dad’ and ‘mom’. I know exactly what they want, and there’s no frustratio­n.” Not convinced? Research shows that learning to say a word requires lots of effort for baby. This is why they only learn to speak from 18 months onwards. Sign language only takes the work of nine muscles, claims Semple.

She taught her granddaugh­ter baby sign language at 7 months. By her first birthday she knew 50 signs and could communicat­e with those around her. By the age of 9 she had an aptitude for language.

Semple says if children are taught basic sign language in class, it will result in a calmer school environmen­t.

“In the playground we will call a child’s name and sign ‘be careful’. It seems to have more power than the spoken word,” she adds.

For parents, it makes things easier by facilitati­ng a two-way conversati­on.

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