Help Your Child Talk: Best Toys for Baby Language Learning


Babies enjoy their interaction with you far more than the most expensive toys. Your face, voice, security and care matter to your child. As she grows, select the right toys to save money while you help her develop language skills.


Soft rattles: in her first year, she loves toys that encourage her to notice sights and sounds, smells and tastes and the way things feel. She learns to spend a few seconds following a moving toy, or turning to the sound of a rattle or a soft, squeaky toy. She builds brain pathways, learning rapidly about her new world as she repeats the same actions often.


Rolling balls: as she starts to move, crawling or shuffling across the floor, her universe opens up. A soft ball with a bell inside encourages her to follow as it rolls away, and she keeps listening as she searches, using her ears to find where it went. Good listening skills lead to easier language development.


Plastic cutlery: safe spoons, plates and cups make good plaything as she starts to eat solid food, sitting in her high chair, dropping them on the floor and looking around to find them. She learns that objects still exist, even when they drop out of sight. This lays foundations for understanding symbols, and helps her prepare to recognise pictures and words.


Teddy: dolls, teddies and soft toys with faces and bodies help her play out pretend sequences. Beginning by carrying teddy around with her, she learns to pretend clean his teeth or wash his feet. She builds up whole scenes, treating teddy as a real person and hearing you say the words for his body parts.


Dolls house: a robust dolls house is a wonderful investment that will last your child for years. If funds won’t allow a commercial house, why not get creative with a cardboard box? Playing with miniature toys takes her symbolic understanding further. She’s a long way from reading, but these games are the early steps in learning.


Musical instruments: rhythm, listening to different sounds and making music herself introduce her to the rhythms of speech and sharpen those listening skills. She needs to hear the difference between a range of speech sounds as she begins to recognise words, and tuning her ears with music helps. She doesn’t need a violin: a saucepan and wooden spoon will do.


Books: tiny babies love books with faces and mirrors. As she grows, she loves books with flaps she can pull up. She likes the repetition of a bedtime story or nursery rhymes, familiarising herself with the words and speech rhythms as you repeat them a hundred times.


Avoid: too many noisy toys that ‘talk’ or ‘sing’. Your child has her own imagination. Let her use it. Sing and talk with her yourself. She likes you better than any plastic toy. Click here to find 50 different, inexpensive activities for your child.


Find out more about how to help your child talk from my new Kindle eBook.

6 comments:

  1. Hey,

    Thanks for sharing the link - but unfortunately it seems to be down? Does anybody here at speechcontacts.blogspot.com have a mirror or another source?


    Thanks,
    Jules

    ReplyDelete
  2. Definitely agree about the too-techy toys: the more basic the toy, the longer it'll last. Basic blocks with which they can build whatever they want are great. For little ones, the stacking tubs are wonderful. One of the best 'toys' ever for us has been a plastic playmat we acquired by accident: it's in constant use to this day. The simple scenes on these mats form the basis for all sorts of imaginative play – not to mention the bonus of wipe-clean. For any kids with sensory issues, toys that give a variety of sensory feedback are fantastic: squishy, furry, soft, hard, bumpy, rattly, shaky, flashing, squeaking... some even have different smells! It all counts.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hello there reading this blog was indeed very interesting , Reflections like this give motivation who reflect this forum:/

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi Jules
    Links seem to be OK - maybe a temporary glitch.
    Can you specify which one failed?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Greetings,

    I have a inquiry for the webmaster/admin here at speechcontacts.blogspot.com.

    May I use part of the information from this post right above if I provide a link back to your website?

    Thanks,
    James

    ReplyDelete
  6. Hi yes, you can link directly through the link button, or post on your site with a link - please let us know the URL of your site
    Thanks

    ReplyDelete

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