"Ba-Ba-Ba", And Baby can Learn Language

POSTED BY Unknown on Sunday, October 17, 2010

Although you do not really understand baby babble (babbling), but whether or not your baby's babbling active can be a foundation for later language development. If the first 6 months he seemed quiet, parents should begin to be wary.

 In general, since the age of 4 months the baby had begun to produce repeated syllables like "ba-ba-ba" or "da-da-da". If a baby is not babbling, it could be there is something disturbing stage of its development.
"Maybe the reason for children less stimulated to communicate, no interference with their hearing or a problem in processing the words. So the problem could be to people who care, at the hearing or in his brain," said Perri Klass, a pediatrician.
He added, babbling now increasingly understood by experts as a pioneer or a basis for the ability to speak. Babbling also could be an indicator for the development of infant social and emotional intelligence. The study also found components of sound in baby babble is influenced by the nervous system, cognitive and social factors.
The most interesting for the experts is a baby in the world do babbling in the same way. New at the age of two years, toddlers begin to form a sound basis in accordance with their native language.
The word itself is a reflection of babble syllables that are repeated with the same consonant words. For example ba-ba-ba or ta-ta-ta. Babbling may be sporadic at first but with time and practice, most infants begin to train the voice, intonation and rhythm of language.
At age 7 months or more usually the sound produced by the baby developed into canonical babble, ie including vocal and consonant sounds. Babies who only rant without making consonant sounds, such as only "aaa" or "ooo" course could be because the muscles in the mouth are not used properly so that the resulting sound does not produce language.
"Actually, babies are able to understand and distinguish all the things he heard before they are able to pronounce the voice," said Carol Stoel-Gammon, a science talk at the University of Washington.
"To make the sound" m ", we must close the lips and the air expelled through the nose. It must be trained," he said. In other words, to produce consonant sounds, the baby needs to listen, to distinguish the sound with vocal sounds and train it over and over again. "Usually, babies begin to speak fluently at the age of 12 months," he said.
To add to his ability to speak, babies need to listen to the real language of the people around him. This means that television, video or sound on the radio can not teach babies to talk.
Take baby talk or talk with a short sentence, the words are clearly spoken, intonation and expression in a pull up and down according to the story you submit. By him talking, you will reinforce his desire to communicate
Source Kompas.com

{ 0 comments... read them below or add one }

Post a Comment

Followers

gg

Preview on Feedage: my-online-office Add to My Yahoo! Add to Google! Add to AOL! Add to MSN
Subscribe in NewsGator Online Add to Netvibes Subscribe in Pakeflakes Subscribe in Bloglines Add to Alesti RSS Reader
Add to Feedage.com Groups Add to Windows Live iPing-it Add to Feedage RSS Alerts Add To Fwicki
Add to Spoken to You

Visitor

free counters

About