Skip to main content

Home/ Words R Us/ Group items matching "Babies" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
1More

5 Words Babies Use - 3 views

  •  
    I found this video very interesting. Who knew all babies had their own "secret language!"
1More

Reading Rockets: Launching Young Readers . Reading and the Brain . Helpful Articles . H... - 0 views

  •  
    This article notes the mutual dependence that both speech/language skills and literacy have on one another. This goes back to the fact that babies who hear more words from their parents often achieve more academically than those who don't converse with their parents as much. Learning anything requires some form of communication and interaction, and without an adequate level of communication, an individual can't learn as effectively.
1More

Languages of love: 10 unusual terms of endearment - 2 views

  •  
    Some terms of endearment can be used in many languages - "baby", "angel" and "sweetheart" for example. But some don't travel as well as you might think. If you call a French person "honey" ("miel") he or she may take it as a unflattering comparison with a sticky mess. And how would you react if someone called you a cauliflower, a flea, or a baby elephant? Here is a quick guide to the language of love around the world - dominated by metaphors from cookery and the animal kingdom - with contributions by language coach Paul Noble.
1More

Your Baby's Brain Holds the Key to Solving Society's Problems - 0 views

  •  
    Dana Suskind, a University of Chicago pediatric otolaryngologist, states our exposure to rich language in the first three years of our lives is critical not just for our ability to pronounce long words but for our overall development and success. The 4 Ts are key points for parents and caretakers of small children: 1. Tune in: be interested in what your child is interested in 2. Talk more: talking more, using richer language, narrating your child's day. 3. Take turns: viewing your child as a conversational partner from day one. Babies are born to learn. 4. Turn off the technology: there is no substitute for real live human interaction.
1More

Language acquisition: From sounds to the meaning: Do young infants know that words in l... - 0 views

  •  
    Without understanding the 'referential function' of language (words as 'verbal labels', symbolizing other things) it is impossible to learn a language. Is this implicit knowledge already present early in infants? Marno, Nespor, and Mehler of the International School of Advanced Studies conducted experiments with infants (4 months old). Babies watched a series of videos where a person might (or might not) utter an (invented) name of an object, while directing (or not directing) their gaze towards the position on the screen where a picture of the object would appear. By monitoring the infants' gaze, Marno and colleagues observed that, in response to speech cues, the infant's gaze would look faster for the visual object, indicating that she is ready to find a potential referent of the speech. However, this effect did not occur if the person in the video remained silent or if the sound was a non-speech sound. "The mere fact of hearing verbal stimuli placed the infants in a condition to expect the appearance, somewhere, of an object to be associated with the word, whereas this didn't happen when there was no speech, even when the person in the video directed the infant's gaze to where the object would appear, concludes Marno. "This suggests that infants at this early age already have some knowledge that language implies a relation between words and the surrounding physical world. Moreover, they are also ready to find out these relations, even if they don't know anything about the meanings of the words yet. Thus, a good advice to mothers is to speak to their infants, because infants might understand much more than they would show, and in this way their attention can be efficiently guided by their caregivers."
1More

Babys Speak in Mother's Tongue - 8 views

  •  
    German researchers say babies begin to pick up the nuances of their parents' accents while still in the womb.
1More

18 and Under - Understanding Babble as a Key to Development - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  •  
    This article discusses the importance of baby babble in language development.
1More

Understanding Babble as a Key to Development - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  •  
    The experimenters argue that a baby's vocalizations signal a state of focused attention, a readiness to learn language. When parents respond to babble by naming the object at hand, the argument goes, children are more likely to learn words. So if a baby looks at an apple and says, "Ba ba!" it's better to respond by naming the apple than by guessing, for example, "Do you want your bottle?"
2More

Babel's Dawn: Birds R Us - 3 views

  •  
    "Birds learn to sing their songs and babies learn to make the sounds of their language in the same way.... Furthermore, both birds and humans go through a period [critical period] when learning is best accomplished... the brain architecture supporting babbling and birdsong is similar...the same mutated gene, FOXP2, is implicated in both [birdsong and speech]."
  •  
    What a find! He talks about so many of the things we've touched on, and the fact that he titles his post "Birds R Us" is just too funny. :) I like that he provides the links to the original research, too.
1More

YouTube - youngest talking baby - 4 views

1More

Penn center studies science behind baby language | Penn Current - 0 views

  •  
    When it comes to understanding speech, the world's top tech companies are still playing catch-up with children.
1More

Babbling Stage in Babies: Definition & Explanation | Study.com - 0 views

  •  
    Babbling is the term for the second stage of speech development after the newborn stage of crying. Anyone who has been around a newborn knows they cry when they're hungry, cold, sick or in need of changing. Some cry because they just want to be held.
1More

A New View of Language - 1 views

  •  
    New research on language acquisition in babies leads scientists to believe that babies map sounds and critical aspects of their language before they begin speaking.
« First ‹ Previous 61 - 80 of 130 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page