signing with babies for communication & relationship support

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SIGNING WITH BABIES FOR COMMUNICATION & RELATIONSHIP SUPPORT Lisa Keller, M.A. CCC/SLP Speech-Language Pathologist, Early On Kent ISD & Lowell Area Schools Independent Certified Instructor for Baby Signs® Programs

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Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support. Lisa Keller, M.A. CCC/SLP Speech-Language Pathologist, Early On Kent ISD & Lowell Area Schools Independent Certified Instructor for Baby Signs® Programs. Objectives. WHAT is signing with babies? WHY sign with babies? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

SIGNING WITH BABIES FOR COMMUNICATION & RELATIONSHIP SUPPORT

Lisa Keller, M.A. CCC/SLPSpeech-Language Pathologist, Early On Kent ISD & Lowell Area SchoolsIndependent Certified Instructor for Baby Signs® Programs

Page 2: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

OBJECTIVES

WHAT is signing with babies?

WHY sign with babies?

HOW do you sign with babies?

WHEN do you start?

WHERE do you sign with babies?

Page 3: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

WHAT IS SIGNING WITH BABIES?? The use of simple signs to

communicate “…Provides a means of

communicating when the spoken modality is not fully developed.” JSLHR, Vol. 47, 173-186- Feb. 2004

“Giving babies a way to communicate before they can talk.” Baby Signs® Institute

“Provides babies with signs to express needs, thoughts and feelings.” Baby Signs® Institute

Page 4: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

WHY SIGN WITH BABIES?

Page 5: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

THE BABY SIGNS® PROGRAM SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH Long-term study funded by National Institutes

of Health

Participants: 140+ families beginning when their babies were 11 months Signing and non-signing group Same in sex, birthorder, tendency to vocalize or

verbalize words, parent’s education level & income levels

Assessment Standardized language measures at 11, 15, 19,

24, 30 & 36 months At age 8 years, WISC-III IQ test

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Page 6: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

THE BABY SIGNS® SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH CONT’D.

Results 24 month-olds signers were talking more like 27 or 28

month-olds Putting together significantly longer sentences 36 month-old signers on average were talking like 47

month-olds Eight year-old signers scored an average of 12 points

higher in IQ testing

Conclusion The Baby Signs® program helps children develop both

language and cognitive skills

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Page 7: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

THE BABY SIGNS® PROGRAM PROVEN BENEFITS Reduces frustration and builds trust Allows babies to share their worlds Strengthens the parent/infant bond Reveals how smart babies really are Promotes positive emotional development Boosts babies’ self-confidence Helps babies learn to talk Jumpstarts intellectual development

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Page 8: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

DR. ELIZABETH BATES, DIRECTORCENTER FOR RESEARCH IN LANGUAGE, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT SAN DIEGO “It has to do with how easily

one can imitate and reproduce something with a great big fat hand as opposed to the mini, hundreds of delicate muscles that control the tongue.”

“You can also see somebody using a hand, which you can’t do with the tongue.”

The New York Times article, Before Babies Talk, Signs and Signals, January 6, 2004.

Page 9: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

MORE QUOTES FROM DR. ELIZABETH BATES… “It is well established that the more you talk

to babies- and you gesture naturally as you do that- the higher their vocabularies.”

“Something that can increase your child’s vocabulary will increase IQ.”

“Research shows huge individual differences in how much adults communicate with children.”

“… show significant effects probably because a subset of the parents were not communicating with their kids as much as they start to when they enter these programs.”

Page 10: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

WILL SIGNING HINDER THE DEVELOPMENT OF LANGUAGE?

NO! It helps! “… gestures enhance rather than hinder

language development” JSLHR, Vol 47, 173-186 Feb 2004

Studies have shown signing to be useful for children with Down Syndrome and Autism

For a bilingual child, “signs help to smooth the road to understanding and speaking both languages” Baby Signs® Institute

(milk) sign=object (milk)=“leche”=“milk”

Page 11: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

WILL SIGNING HINDER LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT? CONTINUED… For late talking toddlers who have good

prognostic indicators as well as toddlers with pervasive developmental delays and other language impairments

Including children with SLI, DS and autism Gestures can be used to compensate for

spoken language Clinicians may need to train the adults in a

child’s environment to exploit alternative modalities such as gestures

JSLHR, Vol 47, 173-186 Feb 2004

Page 12: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

SIGNING AND ATTACHMENTSUPPORTING THE RELATIONSHIP

Page 13: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

BABY SIGNS® INSTITUTEFORGING BONDS OF LOVE AND AFFECTION THAT CAN LAST A LIFETIME…

A secure emotional bond with loving parents during infancy lays the foundation for future emotional development

“secure” vs. “insecure” attachment depends on sensitivity and responsiveness on the part of the parent; their ability to “read” their baby well and respond in a timely fashion

Children fall in love with those who meet their physical needs, comfort them, protect them, make them feel loved, understood and respected.

Page 14: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

CONT’D… Signing helps parents to “read” their baby

well and respond appropriately Parents pay closer attention to their child as

they look for them to sign There’s really somebody home in there! Babies can share their world with their

parents increasing the joy that each takes in the other’s company

Successful communication and family interactions can build the child’s self-esteem as well as language abilities, JSLHR, Vol 47, 173-186

Page 15: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

3. WHEN DO YOU START?

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Page 16: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

BABY SIGNS® INSTITUTE THREE APPROACHES… Birth- 8 months be patient & persistent “lag” 8-12 months see more immediate results 12+ months babies are likely to sign more quickly babies may use their signs for a shorter period of time

Any baby or toddler who shows readiness to communicate, but cannot do so effectively with words, is a candidate for signing, and, as a parent, you should not feel that it’s too early or too late to start.

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Page 17: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

BABY SIGNS® DEVELOPMENTAL READINESS Is your baby beginning to point to things? Is your baby bringing toys or objects to you &

looking for a response? Is your baby beginning to wave “bye-bye?” Is your baby beginning to shake his/her head

for “no” or “yes?” Is your baby beginning to take an interest in

picture books? Even though your baby knows some words,

are there still important things your baby would like to talk about but can’t?

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Page 18: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

DEVELOPMENTAL READINESS + INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES!

How often you demonstrate the signs you want to teach

How interested your baby is in communication

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Page 19: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

4. HOW DO YOU SIGN WITH BABIES?

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Page 20: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

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JUST LIKE TEACHING BYE-BYE !

EYES HANDS VOICE FACE

Page 21: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

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STEPS TO SUCCESS Start with just a few

signs, no more than five.

SAY the word and the sign together

REPEAT the sign and the word often

LOOK at baby when you sign; make sure baby is looking at you

HELP baby make the sign

Page 22: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

HOW TO CHOOSE SIGNS Individualized Plan- choose 5 with parents

Match to the child’s interests objects, actions and describing words words your baby cannot say yet words your child does not say clearly help in dangerous situations Prevent frustration Frequently-used words Some babies make up their own! Go with it!

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Page 23: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

SUGGESTED STARTER SIGNS, BABY SIGNS® PROGRAM Animals: dog, cat, turtle, bunny People: mommy, daddy Things: hat, ball Mealtime: more, eat, drink, all done Manners: please, thank you Safety: hot, hurt

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Page 24: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

WHEN TO TEACH SIGNS During daily routines!

Mealtime, bedtime, bathtime, at the park, pets, getting dressed, etc.

Reading books

Singing songs

Page 25: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

SIGNING AT HOME www.babysigns.com www.signingtimes.com www.aslpro.com www.signingsavvy.com Books

I Love You Mommy! (A Little Golden Book) Mommy, cat, dog, ball, hat, eat, hot, more

Out and About (A DK “Baby’s World” Book) Mommy, daddy, eat, more, hat, ball, hot, hurt

Biscuit’s new Trick (Alyssa Satin Capucille) Dog, cat, ball (lots of repetition makes this book a good

choice!) Goodnight Moon (Margaret Wise Brown)

Rabbit, mouse, moon, stars, sleep, hush, mittens, kittens, eat, brush

Brown Bear, Brown Bear (Bill Martin, Jr.) Bear, bird, duck, horse, frog, cat, dog, sheep, fish, children

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REFERENCES 1. Baby Signs How to Talk with Your Baby

Before Your Baby Can Talk, Linda Acredolo, PhD and Susan Goodwyn, PhD

2. Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research (JSLHR), Vol 47, 173-186 Feb 2004

3. The Baby Signs® Program: A Helpful Tool in Bilingual Settings, article by Linda Acredolo, PhD and Susan Goodwyn, PhD

4. Keeping the Bough from Breaking; Signing and Attachment, article by Linda Acredolo, Ph.D and Co-founder, Baby Signs, Inc.

Page 27: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

REFERENCES CONT’D 5. Before Baby Talk, Signs and Signals,

article from The New York Times January 6, 2004

6. The Boom in Baby Sign Language, by David Hochman February 5, 2005 Life Magazine

Page 28: Signing with Babies for Communication & Relationship Support

LISA KELLER, M.A. CCC/SLP [email protected]

Kent County Early On

Lowell Area Schools, Infant-Toddler Program

Independent Certified Baby Signs® Instructor Baby Signs® Sign, Say & Play Classes Baby Signs® Parent Workshops Contact me for running these classes for your

program