From birth through the first few months, babies thrive on infant stimulation. Visual stimulation, tactile stimulation and auditory stimulation can play big roles in your interactive time together. Infant stimulation can also help improve your baby's curiosity, attention span, memory, and nervous system development. In addition, many babies who receive appropriate stimulation reach developmental milestones faster and have better muscle coordination.
Babies love repetition and will begin to mimic facial gestures we make. When you place your face directly in front of baby's this can provide visual stimulation, entertainment and socialization skills for your little one. Couple this visual interaction with sounds, and you also trigger important auditory stimulation. Try humming, singing or even telling a story. You can say something you are familiar or make something up as you go. Your baby won't even mind if the words don't make sense, as long as you continue to speak, or sing, in a loving tone your baby will listen intently.
Touch can be one of the most important and best ways to stimulate your little one. It provides contact, reassurance and relaxation. The important sense of touch can be stimulated through play and close contact. By playing with baby's hands and fingers you can stimulate your baby's tactile senses. Also when you allow your baby to grasp your fingers, you continue this interaction and help to engage baby in this tactile learning process.
You may also continue this interactive play by using gentle movements to stimulate many senses at one time. First try laying your baby down on a soft blanket, and while singing, help your little one to gently cross arms and then open them. Next try this with the legs and continue singing or humming to stimulate both auditory and tactile senses at the same time. You can create visual stimulation by being expressive with your face, and making eye contact, while you engage in this playtime activity.
Consider also the confinement of being in a diaper most of the time. To help increase baby's tactile input, you might try some activities that allow you to spend time together and don't require baby to wear their diaper. Infant Massage may be one of these important activities. During massage time, your baby is free to explore without their diaper and you provide stimulation through touch, sight, sound and smell. By warming oil in your hands your baby begins to listen to the swishing sounds, see your hands moving, smell your scent and any the oil may have, and learn what is happening next.
Begin massage when you are calm and relaxed. Start by asking baby's permission and then resting your warmed hands on baby's legs and feet. Begin with gentle stroking down baby's legs to their little feet, then hug each toe with your fingers and kiss the bottom of the feet. All the time making eye contact and speaking lovingly to your baby. If your baby is enjoying this time together continue on by stroking down the chest and over the tummy. If you want to focus a little more time on baby's tummy, you can massage using your flat, warmed hand moving in a clockwise circle. Then move on to the arms. Again on the arms, stroke down the arm towards the hands, hug each finger and kiss the palms. Then while hugging your little one you can stroke their back.
Together you will learn what activities you both enjoy and how best to stimulate your ever growing and developing baby!
Copyright (c) 2007 Liddle Kidz? Infant and Children's Pediatric Massage
Baby's Development Week By Week
Young babies are excellent mimics, primarily because they don't copy purely due to instinct, but in fact they actually enjoy copying your behaviour. Experts now recommennd that this natural mimicry be harnessed by parents for positive benefits to the infant and parents which can help in long term ways. Experts are encouraging the parents to teach their children baby sign language even before they learn to speak. By giving the young child a way to express itself through signing its needs to the parents, it makes for a less stressful experience for all concerned. In this day and age one less stress for parents already coping with modern life just has to be a good thing.
Signing is a useful stepping stone in the development of communication for the baby, and helps to lead the infant towards speech. Even as the child progresses to speech there are extra benefits to continuing to practise baby signing. Some may be led to believe that trying to learn two languages (spoken and signing) at the same time may confuse the youngsters brain, but tests, and ral life examples have proven that this fear is unfounded. In actual fact the twin languages can actually be used to augment each other and to help explain context where difficulty does arise.
A number of scientists believe that teaching sign language to your baby can actually result in better development of your childs brain. Babies who learn to speak via the route of sign language get higher levels of brain stimulation than those who miss out sign language, and just jump straight to learning to speak.
As always the beliefs of these scientists are based on the facts they know about the workings of the human brain. Learning speech and sign language simultaneously is akin to learning two languages at the same time. As a baby learns speech the information is processed by the brain, and then stored for later reference in an area of the brain's left hemisphere. Conversely when the baby is using signing the entire process becomes more complex. When using baby sign language, the brain is forced to consider the visual cues, which are processed in the right hemisphere, and then transferred for re-processing and storage to the left hemisphere. As you can see this will benefit in better left brain right brain communication, and use of the brain as a whole. In addition scientists like Dr. Marilyn Daniels note that the babies who are learning just speech make use only of two organs, the mouth and the ear. Babies using sign language also develop hand co-ordination, and have to use visual clues bringing their eyes into use.
All of this combined means that using baby sign language helps to develop a better comprehension of language earlier in the childs development. Recent studies also showed that signing assists in the children's reading abilities. The sign-trained children already have the ability to remember words visually in conjunction with their real meaning, so they are less prone to forgetting the meaning of words when they start to learn to read. Non signing children have been found to have more difficulty when first learning to read.
Now you understand some of the benefits of baby sign language it should be easier to make the decision to start teaching your baby sign language. There really doesn't seem to be any downsides so far as tests have shown,so why shouldn't you give your baby the benefits that signing can offer?
Both Tina Allen, Lmt, Ciit, Cimi & Douglas Titchmarsh are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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