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A day in the life and some sign language links
Submitted by community on Tue, 22/01/2008 - 7:23pm.
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Posted with permission from Pirate Papa


today we played in the snow for the first time hands got cold pretty quick

upon returning in we discover that snow is in fact edible and delicious

they are both wandering around trying to say 'hermana'
and signing up a storm

I highly recommend signing with your child as early as they will pay attention. My mother was a sign language interpreter while I was growing up. I was fluent until age six when I stopped using it. Now, at 23, I've picked it up again in order to communicate with my children. Lyli and Scarleht just turned 19 months today and know upwards of 50 signs apiece. Children can sign long before they can speak and many of the early frustrations of parenthood can be easily bypassed by means of this method of communication. Plus it's fun for you and your child, gets those rusty neural networks tickin' again and has been proven to increase the development of your child in some astonishing ways. Language, critical thinking, problem solving, everything is sped up due to the acquisition of a language at such an early age.

I wish there were better resources out there but this will have to do:

Sign With Your Baby - at least they're Seattle-based, I can't vouch for their business practices other than that but they've put together a decent program. I'd just keep the book and maybe find a few other decent sign language dictionaries and go for it. It's not like you're going to be signing with many deaf people and need to be fluent or precise. It's the principle which counts here and the effects will be the same regardless of the quality. You can even invent signs of your own or better yet listen to your child and let them invent their own. It gets tricky sometimes trying to decode their little twitching hands and so many signs look alike (sorry and please; thank you and hot) but you'll get the hang of it.

God, I've been looking at some of the baby sign websites out there and they look strange! DON'T DO SEE-SIGN I BEG OF YOU. Stick with American Sign Language, here's a basic online video dictionary and here's another one: Handspeak(I haven't investigated the quality very thoroughly). There are also a few forms of international sign but I don't know much about them at all. Please feel free to contact me regarding sign language as I still have many resources available through my mother. Good Luck!

alas, it has been another long day. and i am a tired papa.

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We started teaching our baby

We started teaching our baby to sign, but she's only 3 months so she can't do it yet. We're hoping by the time she reaches six months she'll start using it and be able to sign hungry, more, milk and hi. For now that's about the extent of my ability, but the more my wife and I learn the more we can teach our baby.

Yesterday we had lunch with friends who have grandchildren that use sign at the ages of 1 & 3. It was kind of funny when the 1 year old was signing to me and I had to have the 3 year old translate that the baby wanted a spoon. I have seen it first hand, it works very well for young children and their parents.
Signing Time on PBS television is not too bad, I think they also have a website.

If you're going to learn

If you're going to learn sign language, PLEASE PLEASE learn your national sign language. For example, if you're in New Zealand, learn New Zealand Sign Language rather than ASL. Why? National sign languages are endangered, and like so many other local cultural phenomena, they are under threat from the irresistable forces of cultural imperialism.

Your national sign language is cherished by your local Deaf community, and if you take your time to learn sign from native speakers, you'll have the opportunity to learn it properly and meet people from an entirely different culture, without leaving home.

Have you ever tried to learn Spanish from a dictionary ??? Learning a sign language from a dictionary can result in similar results.

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