Stimulating Infant Language Development Flashcards

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1
Q

Introduction & Background

A

Research: human brains begin development very early

Early months and years of life are critical and can be predictive of eventual lifetime achievement.

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2
Q

Sheehan (Stanford Child Neurology); child’s brain is:

A
  • 25% of adult weight at birth
  • 75% of adult weight at 2 1/2 years
  • 90% of adult weight at 6 years
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3
Q

Research of Fowler & colleagues: 2 groups of babies (A/B)

Longitudinal study into late teens

A

A. Lang. stimulation at 4 months= achieved more than group B in every area-cognitive and linguistic skills.
B. Lang. stimulation at 12 months=

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4
Q

Justice, L. & Redle (2014) Communication sciences and disorders: a clinical evidence-based approach (3rd ed.)

A

Study concluded that: the more Responsive caregivers are…the earlier babies will say their first worlds and put 2 words together.

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5
Q

Turnbull & Justice 2012 summarize research of key indicators of caregiver responsiveness:

A
  1. Wait & listen
  2. Follow babies lead
  3. Join in and play
  4. Be face to face
  5. Use a variety of questions and labels
  6. Expand and extend
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6
Q

Research of Tamis-Lemonda and colleagues:

A

-Caregiver RESPONSIVENESS is key; responsiveness addresses child’s current control focus of interest and provides meaningful input.

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7
Q

One study showed that:

A
  • Children of HIGHLY responsive mothers achieved 50-word milestones at 15 months old
  • Children of LESS responsive mothers achieved at 21 months old
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8
Q

The most powerful mechanism for moving a baby from babbling to fluent speech was……

A
  • how a parent responded to children’s vocalizations in the moment.
  • how often a mother initiated a conversation with children not predictive of language outcomes
  • *Most significant factor: if mother responded when child initiated.
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9
Q

YouTube Video: Still face experiment

A

Shows how important caregiver responsiveness is!

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10
Q

General Language Stimulation Ideas

A
  1. Start talking to baby at birth**
    • face to face contact is ideal
  2. Begin reading to baby very early!
    • Use simple books w/ colorful pics
    • Label common objects and actions for the baby (“Look-BEAR. The BEAR is eating.”)
  3. Introduce Music
    • Sing to baby
    • Play music
    • The baby can play!
  4. Ask Questions
    • Pause between questions, increases turn-taking skills
  5. Introduce 2 languages from birth!!
  6. Introduce the baby to rattles-different noises
  7. Play turn-taking games (peek-a-boo, patty cake)
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11
Q

General Language Stimulation Ideas continued…

A
  1. Remember that most newborns benefit from black and white pics and crib mobiles.
  2. Put a safe-glass mirror**in the baby’s crib, point out and label her body parts.
  3. Imitate sounds the baby makes and make new sounds too!
  4. Use greetings and expressions
    “Hi Jennifer!”
    “Bye bye Brandon!”
  5. When cleaning the house or running errands…
    Bring the baby along, describe what you are doing & introduce baby to new people.
  6. Provide many opportunities:
    -To put simple objects in and out of containers; helps with fine motor skills, object permanence and cognitive skills.
  7. Make sure to provide a Variety of Safe, Fun, Interesting Toys.
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12
Q

General Language Stimulation Ideas continued…

A
  1. Let the baby be in Nature
  2. LABEL:
    -What the baby is paying attention to; TALK about it.
    “There is the beach!” “Here is your ball!”
  3. Use the same words…
    -In daily activities and routines; during dressing label body parts & clothing items
    “Here are your SHOES!” “We will put your SHOES on”
  4. Start a Scrapbook***
    -Soft cotton cloth book, cut fav animals, objects; glue in book.
    -Go through scrapbook w/ the baby, have him/her feel the pics as you name them.
    - Let baby touch other pics & objects
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13
Q

LABELING PLAY: The research of William Fowler:

A

Labeling Play: naming common objects that babies encounter in their daily experiences.

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14
Q

How? Example: The KEYS

A

-Engage the baby’s attention to an object, action or event
-LABEL in the MOMENT!
-Start with words in short sentences, Emphasizing KEY word.
Ex: “Keys, lots of Keys…I’m going to put the Keys in the ignition.”

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15
Q

Advantages of Word Labeling over Ordinary Speech:

A

ORDINARY SPEECH: proceeds in the background, unrelated to baby’s attention or interest

WORD LABELING**: engages baby’s attention directly.

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16
Q

**WORD Labeling:

A
  • Simple, decreases complexity of language baby hears
  • Concrete; words relate to things they apply to
  • Isolates & Stresses KEY WORDS-easier for baby to understand
17
Q

ORDINARY Labeling:

A
  • Complex, difficult words & sentences
  • Abstract, not related clearly to what is being talked about
  • Words embedded in ongoing speech