Baby Sign Language to Help You Celebrate Chinese New Year!

Today millions of families around the world will begin the celebrations of the year of the “Yang”, meaning goat or sheep. If you are celebrating we want to wish you a year full of good fortune & love.

Aside from delicious food my favorite tradition is the giving and receiving of hong bak (the little red envelopes stuffed with money). When I was a little girl, I would keep the envelope under my pillow for many days after receiving it from my grandfather. My grandfather was an immigrant who ran a general store. His store looked just like the illustration below:

General Store

Image Credit: Amelia Lau

Here is a little list of baby signs to introduce your baby or toddler to various elements of this wonderful celebration.

Fireworks

Envelope

Goat

Lantern

Sheep

Family

Party

Red

Fish

Rice

Candy

Grandfather

Grandmother

 

Xin Nian Kuai Le!

Ten Awesome Baby Sign Language Flash Cards for Mardi Gras

 

Mardi Gras

Mardi Gras is celebrated around the world in many different ways. Here in the U.S. is mainly an adult activity but in many countries the holiday is embraced by families particularly little ones. In South America children wear costumes and make Easter-like egg shells filled with confetti (cascarones).

At our home we make a little King’s Cake and give everyone small presents with candy and necklaces

Time to celebrate! Today is Mardi Gras a time for fun and playfulness. Take time to teach your little one a few Mardi Gras signs:

Purple

Green

Yellow

Baby

Cake

King

Necklace

Costume

Candy

Party

Take time to do something fun with your little ones!

Happy Mardi Gras!

 

Baby Sign Language is a Language of Love

Baby Sign Language I Love YouImage Credit: HelloBabyPhoto.com

Is hard to believe that we have been helping families communicate with their babies for almost five years. We can’t begin to explain how this project has filled our hearts with joy. Each day we receive letters, personal messages and phone calls with beautiful stories and videos with testimonies of how baby sign language has impacted the family bond and communicational development of your little ones.

Just last week my friend Sonya invited me to join them at her daughter’s first ballet recital. Her little girl Marguerite started signing with us in 2011. When Maggie came on stage she was beaming with pride but for a moment we saw hesitation and fear in her face. From our place in the fourth row I saw Sonya signing “I Love You“, and as if by magic Maggie smile and had the empowerment to move forward with part.

 

First Recital

 

Chances are your baby will know over 100 signs by the time they are three years old, as they become more verbal signs will begin to fade replaced by speech. While most baby signs will fade away the long-term benefits such as improved academic performance and self confidence will remain with your child for a lifetime. Along with those benefits for many little ones like Maggie “I Love You” will remain for years to come. A secret code that will surface when words may not be appropriate. I hope to see Sonya sign I love you to Maggie as she gets ready to score a goal, the first time she rides the school bus, the day she gives a valedictorian speech and hopefully as she is walking down the aisle to say “I do.”

Whether you are just starting and working on your basic baby sign language skills or you are a veteran who together with your baby have mastered all 52 signs from our flash card deck we want to encourage you to see baby sign language as a stepping stone that will equip your little one with confidence and will equip you with the right communication skills to tell your child just how much you love them.

Want to give your little one a fantastic Valentine’s present? The Signing Time DVD collection is a classic that will reinforce signs in the context of singing. All four DVDs’ are part of our Premium Baby Sign Language Kit available for shipment in the U.S. and internationally.

 

Baby Sign Language Helps You Turn The Terrible Twos Into The Terrific Twos

Temper Tantrum

The Temper Tantrum Explained

At its very root a temper tantrum is rooted in your toddler’s inability to communicate his needs and wants. At age two their understanding of the world that surrounding often surpasses their verbal ability to convey their needs or complete a task through imitation that he or she perceives as achievable. Thankfully, their motor and verbal skills will most likely catch up by the time they are three to four years old, significantly reducing the symptoms of the terrible twos. But what is a parent to do in the interim?

Take Control & Give Control

Dealing with a temper tantrum  can be utterly overwhelming whether  you are a first-time parent or a veteran. Even when you are tired it is essential that you remember that YOU are in control. Do not be indifferent or laugh at your baby. He or she is trying to communicate in a highly rudimentary way; listen. Use your voice and calming signs such as I love you & quiet as a consistent reinforcement of the expected behavior. Take control of the situation through reassurance and eye contact and attempt to identify the message behind the tantrum. Give control by teaching your baby basic signs to communicate core needs. When the tantrum is taking place ask and sign for baby potential triggers such as tired or hungry If the baby has a request that is inconsistent with their welfare, like wanting candy ten times a day you should still acknowledge their want and offer healthier options as well as a simple explanation that affirms your understanding of their want.

Identify The Triggers & Equip Your Baby With Relevant Signs

Every baby is unique when it comes to their personality and preferences. Spend time learning about your baby’s favorite activities, foods or toys and emphasize the learning of signs associated with their preferences. Consider printing the most relevant flash cards and posting the card on your wall to allow your baby to point to a particular sign when they are too frazzled to sign. By giving your baby the skills to convey specific preferences unique to them you will see a significant reduction in temper tantrums.

Empower Your Toddler with Options

Options are empowering for all of us. Within limits you should work on introducing your baby to decision-making and options. Keep in mind that options for babies should be about selecting from two or more good choices or at a minimum parents should stick to choices that are safe & healthy. Through giving options your baby is learning how to think and how to move forward in handling simple processes. Toddlers often struggle with matters of self-help such as grooming or dressing on their own. Consider teaching your toddler signs to identify colors such as blue or green and begin challenging them with questions like: Would you like to wear your blue or your green shoes? By giving an open question your toddler is unlikely to revert to the classic  “no!”

Encourage Independence Though The Learning of Self-Help Tasks

Another great way to reduce tantrums associated with the terrible twos is to keep your toddler busy with achievable self-help tasks such as learning how to put their own shoes on or simple grooming tasks like brushing their hair. Teach your toddler the baby signs associated with each task, use the sign contextually and let your baby suggest grooming or self-help tasks he or she may be inclined to do on their own.

Let Love Save The Day

Even when you make your best effort and your toddler has the means to overcome communication barriers there will be challenging days. Give yourself a break and find ways to give and receive love.   Start anew each day with confidence that every day your toddler will discover new and better ways to engage with the world that surrounds them.

Take a look at the Baby Sign Language Ultra Kit. 12 different baby sign language resources to use and enjoy from pregnancy to age 4.

Has Baby Sign Language helped your toddler overcome the terrible twos? Tell us more about it in the comments.

 

Annabelle Reads & Signs: A Baby Sign Language Story

This week we are featuring Annabelle and her daddy reading from the Signing Time Book Collection.

Video: Anabelle Signing at 12 months

From her mom Kaiya:

We started signing with Annabelle around six months but were not very consistent with signing.  When we saw the Summer of Signing Challenge, we jumped on the opportunity to get a Premium Baby Sign Language  Kit for her as soon as the challenge started.  She watches Baby Signing Time most days because she loves the music.  She learned milk fairly early, but it was her only sign for a long time and she started using it for everything (it’s her give me give me sign).  Next she learned more, although for a long time we had to actually sing her the more song in order to get her to sign it.  Around eleven months she picked up a few more words:  eat, drink, and, dog.  She is now 12 and a half months and knows 10 words.
We went to the horse park yesterday and she spent the whole time signing horse and then pointing to the horses.  She was so excited.  I had no idea she knew the sign for horse (although it is on the video she watches).  It took me a few minutes to realize what she was signing because she is not capable of the more advanced signs and has modified almost all her signs.  However, when she does it consistently anytime she sees a horse or we ask her about a horse, it becomes obvious that is what she means.  When we got home from the horse park I noticed she was doing a similar sign only pointing to her nose instead of her head and I thought she was just getting sloppy with horse.  Today she  was doing the sign with her daddy, saying Ca, ca, ca over and over again and pointing.  Neither of our cats were in the room so Daddy told her there were no cats, until i realized she was pointing to a cat figurine on the wall.  It is very exciting to realize that she knows more than we could possibly realize so young.  Now she has to train us to do all the signs that she knows.
  Most of her signs are modified because she can’t handle the advance hand movements yet.  Eat and Drink end up looking the same so we have to pay attention to context.  she can’t figure out the pinching motion for cat, so she points where the whiskers go.  Even so, she is very consistent with most of the signs she knows and she is very good a getting her point across.  They may not meet your requirements for the challenge, but she is signing and has a great vocabulary for at 12 month old baby!