C.B. asks from Mountlake Terrace, WA on November 22, 2006
Baby Sign
Does anyone have any tips on how to get started signing with my 14 month old daughter? I think it would be a fun way to communicate and accelerate understanding between us, but I am a little clueless on how to start signing with her.
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A.H. answers from Portland on November 29, 2006
I started signing to my son around 10 months (that is the age that the baby signing books say is good), but he was completely uninterested. I picked it up again when he was 14 months and he caught on fast. So you're at a perfect age really. I just got some baby signing dvd's and a sign language dictionary (a full dictionary so that I could look up words as needed).
Sign language was a life-saver for us, and I'm really glad I did it. My son didn't start talking until he was 2.5, but by that time he knew nearly 100 signs. It allowed him to communicate with me and saved a lot of frustration. As soon as he learned to say the word he stopped using the sign. He's 3 now and no longer uses any of the signs. I really recommend it, it really helps a young child to get their point across. Good luck with it!
A.T. answers from Sacramento on November 27, 2006
My daughter... I guess she just picks up on things QUICK. She was, I guess 19 months when she learned her first sign word. She is going to be 21 months tomorrow she now signs and says at the same time:
*please
*thank you
*more
*eat
*i love you
*flower
*table
*bed
She actually learned all of these in a matter of 2 weeks. But we also had the help of Baby Einstein: Babys First Words Around the House. Now whenever she wants something I ask her "what do you say?" She says "please?" And does the sign language... well as best as she can, she ends up rubbing her whole torso instead of just her breast area above her heart. I've also heard that children who learn sign language tend to learn faster and use their minds a little bit quicker than children who don't.
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R.B. answers from Portland on November 22, 2006
Yep, like the others said, start with a basic few first until they start to associate the sign with the word, then add more. And yes, always sign and say at the same time so they know they go together and that one means the other. The ones I started with were "Milk" "More" and "Eat". Now my daughter is 2 and knows about 30+ signs and is learning more with signing time.
S.J. answers from Spokane on November 22, 2006
My 19 month has learned about 7 signs in about 3 months i bought a dvd and also have checked books out at the libary they also have videos it is a great way for a child to comunicate with you. Every time i say something that i want him to know the sign for i would sign it. good
Also keep an eye out they dont sign just how it is supposed to sign my sons first sign was thank you and i would have thought that he was blowing kisses. so she may start but you have to really watch
K.C. answers from Las Vegas on November 23, 2006
This was a discussion of note in my livejournal recently.
http://kimberlychapman.livejournal.com/238735.html?thread...# is a thread with my advice to a friend, and another friend's similar advice.
In a nutshell: skip the expensive classes, don't worry too much about formal signs, get a cheap book or better yet borrow from the library first to give it a try, and then keep the whole thing light and informal. Kids will pick up useful signs and skip what's not useful, and they'll mix words and signs. Make up your own when it's convenient or when the child has trouble with the "real" sign as told by someone else. Use it to facilitate communication, but don't consider it a full-out necessity to learn ASL in a formal context unless your child actually needs that. See the link for more details.
Hope this helps. My baby makes some signs and not others, and then invents her own combinations when she wants to.
T.O. answers from Seattle on April 05, 2008
I have seen this done alot lately and I am all for it. My nephew and his wife just do the signing everytime they talk to thier son. He picks it up just like learning to talk.
T. answers from Las Vegas on November 23, 2006
C.,
The answer is just do it. You can get books, DVDs or look on line for signs (you can find interactive sites that demonstrate the signs - which is a lot easier than trying to figure them out from a book). Start with a few key words (milk, eat, hungry are good) and go from there. Just sign them to your daughter any time you say them to her verbally. I have the "Signing Times" DVDs and I'm very happy with them. www.signingtime.com The first 3 DVDs are basic, every day signs. My son is 3 and still loves to watch them.
T.
F.D. answers from Spokane on November 22, 2006
I started signing with my son when he was 6 months old but he didn't pick it up until around 12 months. My son is 14 months now and can sign a couple words. You should start out with one sign at I time like "eat" "milk" or "please" then gradually add more once she gets the hang of it. Here is a website that I use: http://www.aslpro.com/cgi-bin/aslpro/aslpro It shows "actual" people signing so you know you are doing it right. Good luck.
C.D. answers from Bakersfield on December 07, 2006
They have books specifically for signing with your baby. I would start with basic signs like I love you or pretty. Apple and please.
L.W. answers from Las Vegas on November 22, 2006
I started signing with my son at 7 months. We took some classes locally, but you don't have to do that. It's about $100 a class. You can also go to www.weecansign.com and Shannon has tons of helpful info and links on her website. She even has links to signing dictionaries.
They have a package that you can buy and it's actually available now at Costco. It's probably available elsewhere. It's called Sign 2 Me. It has an instructional video and a book. I think it's like $40, but it's worth it. My son loved the Baby Einstein signing video that they have out. It's called Baby Wordsworth.
Hope some of this info is helpful. Have fun signing. My son is now 21 months old and doesn't sign that much anymore because he is talking a lot, but it helped so much when he wasn't able to verbalize what he needed.
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