Weekly Bookshelf–Books for Birth to One Year Olds–Installment 1


Mr. Brown Can Moo, Can You : Dr. Seuss’s Book of Wonderful Noises (Bright and Early Board Books): One of my favorite books when I was little!  A fantastic book for engaging the littlest of us because of the sounds.  Really get into the sounds and your child will avidly follow along.  My two favorite parts were knocking on the book (for “hand on a door, knock knock!”) and the “boom, boom boom!” of the thunder (Dada really got into this one, and Mama liked to bounce me a little on her lap with each boom).


The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle: Clearly a classic, but I loved it because my Mama used signs and sounds throughout the book.  Moon sign, sun sign, eating sounds, and caterpillar sounds (ee, er, ee, er) and finger inching like a caterpillar.  My favorite part of the book was always the beautiful butterfly at the very end.  My Mama loved talking about all of the colors on its wings.


The Foot Book: Dr. Seuss’s Wacky Book of Opposites: Another good book for baby signs and sounds.  Going up and down stairs (Mama’s voice would pitch up and down and she’d walk her fingers up and down the stairs, too), sun sign, moon sign, sick sounds (stuffy nose) and well sounds (happy voice).


Pajama Time! (Boynton on Board)by Sandra Boynton: I loved this book for two years!  The rhyme and rhythm are both so catchy, and there are so many things to do and talk about with this little gem.  My favorite part was “Pajammy to the left, pajammy to the right!  Jamma, jamma, jamma, jamma, P! J!”  Mama would dance me to the left, to the right, and then bounce me a little on the P! J!  Sandra Boynton is a genius.

 

For more information about why my Mama and Dada used baby signs and lots of other hand motions while reading with me, see the Mama’s Corner post from March 25, 2014: Baby Signs and Nurture Shock: Why Baby Signs Work.

Happy Reading!

–Luke (blog co-author, age two and a half)

Baby Signs and Nurture Shock: Why Baby Signs Work


I loved using baby signs (simplified sign language) with Luke.  From when he was born, and knowing full well that I wouldn’t see a return sign for many many months, I did signs as I read even the simplest books with him.  Bird, fish, lion, cat, sheep, dog.  I felt that it was engaging for both of us, and the authors of Baby Signs (the book that I used as a reference), Linda Acredolo and Susan Goodwyn, laid out convincing anecdotal and research-based rationales explaining why signs were worthwhile for creating life-long readers (clearly, a passion of mine).

But I never really understood how they worked.  Because they did work.  Luke didn’t ever use all 50 or so signs that I eventually had in my repertoire, but he certainly understood most of them, and he loved using and watching them as we read.  I’m convinced that he paid more attention to the letters and words on the page because of baby signs, and they helped him understand the abstract, symbolic nature of language.  I know that signs were part of the reason why Luke could recognize his letters by 16 months, read words by 18 months, and read sentences by 24 months.

I recently finished a book called Nurture Shock  by Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman.  The book references new brain research that debunks many firmly-held parenting beliefs, including beliefs about language acquisition.  Many parents have heard that talking to babies is invaluable for a language acquisition head start.  But what the research shows is that simply inundating babies with words is only part of the story.  There are actually a few different things that, when used together, can make language acquisition even easier for babies.

1) Speak in “parentese”: Yup.  That funny voice you use when you exaggerate the pitch of your voice and elongate parts of words.  It helps babies  begin hearing how words are made of distinct sounds and makes the sounds easier to imitate.

2) Use “motionese”: Using a distinct motion for a word helps baby link the object you’re naming and the word you’re saying.

3) Response time: According to Bronson and Merryman, even more important than the sheer number of words spoken to a baby is the response time between a baby looking at an object or making a sound of interest in something and the parent’s reaction or labeling of the object.  Five seconds is about the window before a baby’s attention lags.

So, although Bronson and Merryman don’t specifically link these three ideas to baby signs, the ideas sure do go a long way toward explaining just why baby signs are so effective.  When you read using baby signs, you repeat the words used with signs in “parentese,” you perform a motion with your hand that helps baby focus on the word, and because you’re always on the lookout for any kind of baby sign from baby as you read, your response time to baby’s unspoken questions is short.  And voila!  You’ve just kick started language acquisition.  Cool, right?