|
March 31, 1999
"Baby Signs" Favor Kids' Intellectual Growth in
School
Children who as babies learned to
communicate through the use of simple gestures for such words as
hat or flower -- known as "Baby Signs" -- appear to
have intellectual advantages even as they grow older, shows a
preliminary study.
The children who learned the gestures as
infants and who were later tested as 7- and 8-year-olds, were
shown to perform significantly better on standard I.Q. tests
than those who hadn't learned the gesturing, say Linda Acredolo,
UC Davis psychology professor, and her collaborator, Susan
Goodwyn, a California State University, Stanislaus, professor.
The results from the follow-up study
showed that the baby signing had far more long-lasting effects
than the researchers anticipated.
"Not only do the gestures promote
language and intellectual skills, and family relationships in
infancy and toddlerhood, they also can serve children's
intellectual growth into elementary school," Acredolo says.
One possible explanation for the finding
is that early brain stimulation builds intellectual and
neurological foundations that carry through in children when
they reach school age, Goodwyn says.
The researchers did the follow-up study
to earlier work on baby gesturing to evaluate the effect of the
gestures on language and cognitive development. Their earlier
work resulted in the 1996 book "Baby Signs: How to Talk
with Your Baby Before Your Baby Can Talk" (Contemporary
Books).
The researchers have presented their
findings periodically at child development meetings around the
country.
Media contact:
-- Lisa Crumrine Klionsky, News Service, (530) 752-9841, lrklionsky@ucdavis.edu
|