T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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263.1 | talk, *talk*, TALK! | CRONIC::ORTH | | Thu Aug 16 1990 16:59 | 31 |
| Nadine,
Keep on talking to him! You are his very best "teacher" of language.
Speak to him in whole sentences and do not censor your vocabulary...he
will understand more than you can imagine, and will get most of the
"hard" words from the context, or the repeated usage. And they all talk
at vastly different times! I remember our first son said very little
for what seemed like the longest time. Long after his age-mates were
putting 2 and 3 words together, he was still in the one-word-at-a-time
stage. When he was 16 mos., he had a vocabulary of maybe 15 "words"
(mostly recognizable only to mom and dad!), and we had occasion to
visit with my cousin and her husband and 17.5 month old. This kid
talked in paragraphs! And used pretty sophisticated language/concepts
for her age (Look, Mommy! That's a scary picture there on that book
cover! Do you see it? Don't be scared...I'll hold you!) And our kid
stood there going, "ma", "da", "bye", etc. He was almost 2 before he
started combining 2 or more words into "sentences", but progressed
quickly form there (and he hasn't shut up since!). Our daughter began
"talking" at about 6-7 mos., with "ma", "da", etc. By 1 yr., she was
using 2 or 3 words together correctly ("see ball? Want it! Go get!")
By the time she was 2 she could converse quite fluently with any
reasonably intelligent adult, and be clearly understood. Her grasp of
language/vocabulary, etc., continue to astound us. And our third child,
now 16 mos., is much like his brother, saying only about 5 or 6
recognizable "words".
So....the short of the long is this....they are all so VERY different,
and if you are talking and rading to your child, I wouldn't worry a
bit. He will learn at his own rate. If you ARE worried, anyhow, talk to
your doctor for reassurance, and I'll bet they'll say the exact same
thing. Keep on talking, keep on reading, and watch him grow! They're
all such fun!
--dave--
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263.2 | | TSGDEV::CHANG | | Thu Aug 16 1990 17:39 | 10 |
| Like .1, every child grows at his own rate. Don't worry. Just
keep doing what you are doing. My son is like .1's daughter,
start talking at a very young age (6 months old). He just turned
two and can speak very complicated sentences in both English and
Chinese. However, one of my best friend is a late talker, according
to her Mom, she didn't start talking sentences until 3/4 years old.
Now at 31, she is a marketing manager, and is the last person
in the world that you want to have an argument with :-)).
Wendy
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263.3 | Getting him to answer | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Fri Aug 17 1990 05:46 | 45 |
| Nadine,
Like the other noters said, they all progress at their own rate. You
cannot force your son to speak but you can encourage him to keep
trying, which sounds exactly like what you are doing. My son sounds
exactly like your's is. Mine walked at 9 months, observed EVERYTHING
but didn't say too much - maybe a 12 word vocabulary at 1 year. At
about 18 months his vocabulary was getting better but no "sentences".
I think at age 2 they should be "speaking in short sentences" according
to the experts but they never define short sentence ("yes" is a short
sentence and so is "I've got an itch on my head"). They do pick up the
nouns first (cloud, dog, cat, etc) and then they seem to add a verb
(see cloud, dog sit, cat eat, etc). It then expands more and more.
We did encourage our son to "add on" words by asking him questions
worded such that he had to respond with thought and real words. Asking
do you "see the cloud in the sky?" means you should get a yes or no
answer. You asked a leading question but asking "what's up in the sky?"
or just saying "let's look up in the sky, what do you see?"
will give you the answer of "cloud" and cause the child to really look
at the sky and maybe ask you what something else is up there (an
airplane, the sun, birds flying). There is a book I liked called
"Raising Children Who Love to Learn". It is from the Children's
Television Workshop series and I got it in a local bookstore. I gives
you ideas on how to get the child to think, observe, etc so every
moment of their day can be interesting and develop a natural
inquisitive (sp) nature so learning is fun and part of life. I think
you will like it because your note sounds like our general philosophy
to educating our children, and the process does start from birth. The
book is light reading and takes you from infancy to school-age.
It is very hard to not want our children to progess rapidly and believe
me they grow in all repsects at an incredible rate. I know it was very
difficult for us having a child who was physically advanced of the
average and wonder why his speech wasn't as advanced at the same time.
Well, he more than makes up for it now. Many people have commented of
how diverse his vocabulary is (because we speak to him in adult terms
using simple explanations) and how good his command is for formulating
the whole picture. Keep talking - it's the only way. We talk constantly
together (I think that's key). Hold conversations with the words he
knows and expand on them (like "dog sit", "see dog", etc). You are
adding words he will learn to words he knows and eventually the words
will go from one object to another.
Happy Parenting!!
Andrea
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263.4 | normal way kids grow | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Fri Aug 17 1990 09:34 | 47 |
| > It is very hard to not want our children to progess rapidly and believe
> me they grow in all repsects at an incredible rate. I know it was very
> difficult for us having a child who was physically advanced of the
> average and wonder why his speech wasn't as advanced at the same time.
According to the child development stuff I studied when I was
planning to be an elementary school teacher (jr. high, actually),
this is the normal pattern of development for most normal kids at
any age. Not a rule, just a general pattern.
While they're concentrating on developing one aspect of their
skills, other skills will tend to lag behind. For instance, a
child who is anxious to learn to walk won't be paying as much
attention to words, while a child who's very advanced visually and
likes to study the details of things may not be as active.
This tends to hold true at all ages -- a teenager who has suddenly
made a breakthrough in social skills may have his/her grades drop,
for instance.
There's also a phenomenon called plateau development, in which a
child who has reached a certain level of skill stays at that level
or sometimes even regresses for some time and appears to be
unable to move past that level. But what's usually happening is
that the child is consolodating a great deal of information, and
at the end of the plateau will generally have a "bursting out"
phase of very rapid advancement.
You usually don't notice the plateaus in a child who's working on
alternate skills -- while one skill is in a plateau, other skills
are advancing.
Steven's normal mode of development is the plateau. He'll make
huge advances, then suddenly start being fussy, whiny, clingy,
demanding, and generally acting at least a year younger than his
age. Then a few weeks later it it will end just as suddenly, and
we'll discover that he's grown an inch, learned to throw a
fastball, and added what seems to be about 500 words to the list
of words he can read . . .
And some kids just aren't good verbally. They can be way above
average at ideas, mathematical concepts, and other intellectual
pursuits, and still not be able to frame a complex sentence. This
can be very hard for academically oriented parents to take, but it
is normal.
--bonnie
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263.5 | definition of "simple sentence" | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Fri Aug 17 1990 09:39 | 19 |
| Re: definition of simple sentences
When they say most kids are talking in simple sentences by x age,
they're talking about grammatical simplicity, as a measure of
linguistic accomplishment, not necessarily about the complexity or
sophistication of the ideas the child's expressing.
A simple sentence is one that has a subject, a verb, and other
associated modifiers, but no subordinate or coordinate clauses or
other stuff hanging off the end. The first sentence of this
paragraph is not a simple sentence. It's a compound sentence.
The next two sentences are simple sentences. However, if I were
to add some more stuff at the front, just for the sake of example,
I would wind up making a complex sentence like this one, with a
subjunctive clause, and it would improve the world if most people
avoided that kind of thing even after their language matured to
the point where they could attempt it. :)
--bonnie
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263.6 | Thanks for all your help | JURAN::QAR_TEMP | | Fri Aug 17 1990 09:48 | 7 |
|
Thank you so much everyone for the quick responses! It really means
a lot to me and I love to hear the advice from Moms who had been
there.
-Nadine (concerned_first_time_mom)
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263.7 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Fri Aug 17 1990 10:10 | 10 |
| Well by now, the kid should know the theory of relativity as well as be
able to do quadraditic equations. :')
But seriously, the kids will progress at their speed, not at the speed
you want them to. Our first was speaking fluently before she was 1.5,
our second one is over 1.5 and only says a very few words. Our pedi
says, does she get what she wants? My wife says, "yes" He says what
do you mean she isn't communicating?
Mike
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263.8 | Thanks | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Fri Aug 17 1990 10:51 | 16 |
| RE Bonnie's reply.
You are so right about the development of one skill over another. I
know we were very excited about Berk learning to walk young so we
probalby backed off on speech. Your explanation of "plateauing" is dead
on with my son but does go unnoticed because he is working on another
skill and suddenly he can pedal or remember 10 songs perfectly and we
cannot figure out for the life of us where it clicked along the way.
I'm going to pay attention to see if he "regresses" prior to
"bursting". Is this typical to regress?? He's been clingy lately so
maybe he's "learned" something new.
Thanks for the info.
Andrea
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263.9 | yes | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Fri Aug 17 1990 11:35 | 11 |
| >Is this typical to regress?? He's been clingy lately so
>maybe he's "learned" something new.
Typical, yes, but not necessary, and there are lots of other
causes of clinginess. Illness and emotional stress come to mind.
But if neither of those seem to apply, it's quite likely to be a
plateau (also called a consolidation period -- I think there are
other names, depending on whose theory of child development you're
following).
--bonnie
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263.10 | | BUSY::DKHAN | | Fri Aug 17 1990 11:38 | 20 |
| Re: Bonnie's reply on plateaus...
So what does it mean if they do it all at once....walking and talking
in sentences at an early age, as well as understanding some pretty
difficult stuff. Does this mean you have a child who is able to
process alot of information at once? Or does the child simply handle
the stress of developement well?
Suppose a child says several words at 6 months, walks at 9 months
with a very large vocab. and speaks in simple 2-3 word sentences at
10-11 months. A child that seems on the level of a 5 year old at
only 2.5.....
Is this a child you should present with additional
learning opportunities (if they are interested...wouldn't want to
push). What kind of thing would you do with her?
Just wondering...any suggestions for learning activities?
Dot
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263.11 | more answers | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Fri Aug 17 1990 11:56 | 40 |
| Dot --
What you've presented is one commonly used definition of a "gifted
child" -- one who's ahead of schedule in all areas. This is the
kind of child who's most likely to be bored by the routine of
school and to want to press ahead in all areas . . . it's not an
area of child development I'm terribly familiar with, other than
knowing that the opinion among educators is that it's as damanging
to hold back a gifted child as it is to push a child who's not
ready.
Activities -- generally the child will lead you. If s/he is
interested in words, you can play word games, flash cards, get
activity books for a higher level, introduce them to more
complicated books. If s/he's interested in science, dig out some
hands-on activity books from your library.
This will be true of kids who are talented in a particular area as
well as for the child who's generally gifted. Steven *did*
actually know his colors at about 2, and the pedi was impressed,
but while he continues to be average-bright generally, he displays
a real artistic flare -- seems to be a born abstractionist.
Rather interesting. But I'm digressing.
It's not uncommon for a child who develops quickly at first to
slow down at about age 8 or 9 and have the children who were slow
going through the early stages catch up and often pass them.
Reading early, by the way, isn't a sign of giftedness by itself.
One of the most important things for developing a child who is
interested in learning -- no matter what his or her native
"intelligence" level -- is to expose them to many activities,
ideas, and experiences. Go places that interest you and them. Do
things. Read magazines. Watch TV, drop in on sidewalk concerts
(even if you hate the music), wander through a farmer's market,
drive through the countryside, make applesauce or mudpies, sew a
shirt for a stuffed animal. etc. etc. etc.
--bonnie
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263.12 | Got to stop working full time! | BUSY::DKHAN | | Fri Aug 17 1990 12:16 | 19 |
| Thanks Bonnie.
Since we are moving to Pennsylvania in 2 weeks, and I may have the
opportunity to work part time or not have to work at all, I will
have more time to spend on those kind of fun learning activities.
My daughter, Aisha is the one I was talking about. She amazes me
everyday with her vocabulary and the concepts she can discuss at
only 2.5. We read alot, and talk alot, and sometimes we make bread
together or she helps me clean. I was showing her how to right her
name, and she was very excited about it, but I think I need to use
a different approach as far as that goes. Her skills with a pencil
aren't at the right level for it yet I geuss. I have to start out
much slower.
Like I said, I hope to spend more time with my kids (her brother
Jacob seems to be pretty sharp too, although she is the talker)
when we move.
Dot
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263.13 | | FTSRV::EJA | | Wed Aug 22 1990 09:06 | 32 |
| I am a first time Mom, and this is what I have learnt in 16 months of
parenting:
1. Children/babies will do things (ie start walking, start talking
etc) when they are physically ready and when they want to. They are
not interested in the fact that someone else's baby is the same age as
them, but has been walking, etc for months, now. They can be
encouraged but they cannot be hurried or forced.
2. Whatever age your child is when s/he first develops a new skill,
someone else's child will have done the same thing at an earlier age,
and someone else's child will have done it at a later age.
3. Whatever age your child is when s/he first displays that new skill
to you, you will think that they are the cleverest child in the whole
world.
I write this as the mommy of a little girl who didn't smile until she
was 2 months old, couldn't roll over until she was seven months old,
couldn't sit up unsupported until 8 months old, didn't walk until she
was 14 months old, and at 16 months old can just about say five or six
words. It's lovely hearing about all the advanced babies that all you
noters have. My little girl isn't advanced. She hasn't got any
developmental problems - she does everything well within the average
age-range, she just isn't advanced. But that doesn't stop me feeling
so pround of her that I could burst especially when she learns a new
skill. As far as I'm concerned she's developing at exactly the right
rate for her.
- Elizabeth
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263.14 | right on! | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Wed Aug 22 1990 10:14 | 4 |
| Thanks for putting this in, Elizabeth -- and congratulations on
your charming wonderful daughter.
--bonnie
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263.15 | second | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Wed Aug 22 1990 10:21 | 1 |
| Thanks, Elizabeth! carol
|
263.16 | | TCC::HEFFEL | Sushido - The way of the tuna | Wed Aug 22 1990 11:38 | 5 |
| Yet another thanks for that note....
It's SOOOOOOOO true!
Tracey
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263.17 | Flip side | ULTRA::ELLIS | David Ellis | Wed Aug 22 1990 14:02 | 15 |
| Re .13:
The lessons here are certainly comforting, but there is a flip side. My son
is 15 months old and achieved his physical milestones about the same age as
Elizabeth's daughter. But in his case there _are_ developmental delays, and he
has been in occupational and speech therapy, which has helped him tremendously.
We are very proud when he picks up new skills -- maybe even more so than
parents who can take for granted that their children are functioning normally.
If the milestones seem late in coming, there may or may not be a cause for
concern. It's _extremely_ difficult to diagnose developmental delays that
are not severe in infants. But we have found professionals skilled enough
to point out to us ways of helping our son early. And we are grateful for
the help we have gotten.
|
263.18 | Giving a toy a personality | MCIS5::CORMIER | | Mon Jan 06 1992 09:37 | 14 |
| Anyone remember, or have a book you can look this up, regarding giving
a personality to a toy? My 2 year old (just turned 2 in December) was
playing with my husband, and my husband started to "talk" for the toy.
He expected David to also "talk" for the toy he was holding. I think 2
is a little young for this? As an example:
Dad: (holding a FP Firefighter) "Hi. I'm Larry. Who are you?"
David (also holding a FP Firefighter) "What?"
My husband repeated it, and encouraged David to say "Hi, I'm Joe", but
David just continued to say "What?"
Yesterday I heard David conversing with the same toys, but he was
talking "to" them instead of "for" them. Is this a developmental
milestone, or something he will learn through play? When did your
children start doing this?
Sarah
|