The Building Blocks of Language in Early Childhood
Baby's first word is a day as jubilant as the first time she walks. It is a momentous occasion in the life of a family.
What parents may not realize is the "important day" sticker should also mark an event that goes like this: Baby finishes her bottle, says "aah" and hands it to mommy. "Ahh" doesn't sound like a word, but baby has added a helpful gesture. She's communicating! Another feat between the ages of 8 and 12 months is: Baby looks at daddy and points at the passing kitty cat. Another: Baby looks at her favorite doll on the shelf, looks at mommy's face and back to the doll. These acts communicate baby's desires and interests, and for this reason, they represent a critical stage in prelinguistic development.
Communication is a complex dance of thinking, moving, hearing, imitating,
and eventually interacting. Infants use each of these functions. And they
learn, in time, that it takes two to dance. The growing rapport between
parent and child is critical in the early years, says Steven F. Warren,
professor of human development and director of the Schiefelbusch Institute for Life Span
Studies at the University of Kansas. According to his research with
Paul Yoder at Vanderbilt University, Warren says, "Once the baby is able to
interact, mommy and baby will engage in give and take, sound and gesture in
a way that actually stimulates the child's development."
For families whose children have developmental disabilities, the steps of
the dance aren't always clear, says Warren. Autistic children typically
don't look their parents in the face -- a key signal for communication --
and so parents may not initiate conversation or know when their child wants
something. Because a child with a developmental delay may not have full
motor control, she may not make sounds that adults enjoy, recognize and
reward.
Early childhood research tells us that a baby making frequent and increasingly complex sounds -- even if they're nonsense -- is developing a strong language base that supports later success. Researchers can tell us a great deal about the building blocks of language in the first years of life. Parents should know this information because a significant delay in communication skills may be a signpost of disability.
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