BOSTON -
THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1998
FAMILY
Teaching babies to gesture helps foster language skills
later, according to two researchers.
Before They Talk, They Can 'Sign'
Laurel
Shaper Walters
Special to The Christian Science Monitor
St.
Louis
Strolling her toddler into the shoe
store recently, Elise Niiler Rowley saw nothing but shoes. But
15-month-old Sonia had her eye on something else. Although she
doesn't have many words yet, Sonia was able to tell her mother
about it.
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COMMUNICATION: Megan
Cheatham imitates a frog catching insects as her sign
for the amphibian pictured in her book.
(COURTESY OF LINDA ACREDOLO)
|
"She started flapping her arms,
which is her sign for bird," Ms. Rowley says. "I
looked around and there was a stuffed parrot hanging from the
ceiling. I hadn't noticed it."
Sonia isn't deaf, but her parents
started teaching her simple signs when she was about nine months
old. Their goal is to help facilitate communication while she
learns to speak. Sonia now knows about 30 signs ranging from
airplane (arms out to sides) and Cheerio (finger and thumb
together) to duck (moving hand in quacking motion) and Papa (two
pats on the chest).
Every child learns to wave bye-bye and
nod for "yes" or "no." Baby sign language
extends that idea to help preverbal children communicate more
fully through gestures. What parent doesn't yearn for a window
into their child's mind during the long wait for words?
Simplified sign language helps alleviate the frustration when a
child's ability to understand far exceeds the ability to speak,
say advocates.
"The main benefit is it's a lot of
fun," says Sonia's father, Michael Rowley. "It's not
necessarily to give Sonia a head start in language acquisition
or anything like that. It's just a way of connecting."
Yet research suggests that teaching a
preverbal baby to gesture does boost language skills. Linda
Acredolo, a professor of psychology at the University of
California at Davis, began studying the phenomenon 15 years ago
when her one-year-old daughter came up with her own spontaneous
gestures. First, she began sniffing every time she saw a flower
in real life or in a book. Then, she picked up blowing whenever
she saw a fish - after watching her mother blow the fish mobile
above her bed.
From those early personal experiences,
Ms. Acredolo began a long-term research project to determine if
signing hinders vocal development in any way. After years of
comparative research, Acredolo says the benefits of teaching
babies sign language are overwhelming.
"The signing babies were ahead of
the pack at almost every measure at every age. They were
learning to comprehend language faster, they were learning to
talk faster, they were putting words together faster, and they
were doing better on the infant IQ tests at two years," she
says.
In 1996, Acredolo and her research
partner, Susan Goodwyn, an associate professor of psychology at
California State University, wrote the book "Baby
Signs" (Contemporary Books) to help parents interested in
teaching their babies to gesture. The book includes about 50
sign suggestions along with advice.
The suggested signs are often similar to
American Sign Language, which is used in the deaf community. But
the goal is to keep it simple. "Just make up something on
the spot, if you want," Acredolo says. "It's not
realistic for parents to teach their babies ASL, and it puts up
a barrier if babies have to learn specific signs. This is just
transitional."
Once children master the words, they
begin to gradually drop the signs. "The words are really
much more versatile than the signs," Acredolo says. But
signs do help translate baby's early utterances when "ba"
can mean anything from ball to bottle. With a gesture added,
it's clear what baby is talking about.
Acredolo and Goodwyn contend that
signing babies inevitably live in a language-rich environment
that fosters rapid vocal development. "When a baby points
at a bird and does the bird sign, the parent immediately floods
that baby with language," Acredolo says. "They might
say: 'Yes, you're right. Look at the pretty birdie. And look
here's a blue one over here.' They're getting bathed in vocal
language. You know the child is listening because they chose the
topic."
The authors recommend beginning to sign
with babies at about nine months. Indicators of readiness
include learning to wave bye-bye and pointing to objects and
"asking" for a label. Games and songs are a good way
to introduce gestures. Many children, for example, learn to
imitate a spider when singing the "Eensy-weensy
spider" song.
"It's not necessary to do flash
cards or any kind of real lessons," Acredolo says.
"These can just be used in day-to-day routines with parents
modeling the signs when they say the word."
(c) Copyright 1997, 1998 The
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