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What can these five babies teach us about language development? This week I’ve been exploring the stages of infant language acquisition. And today, I’ve done something special: curated a compilation of five videos tracing the progression of infant vocalizations over time. As you watch, note that each new clip...

123,907 次观看 • 1 年前 •via X (Twitter)

10 条评论

Maris McMort 的头像
Maris McMort1 年前

Maybe for Christmas, Dan, you’ll give us an hour-long special? I could honestly watch your videos all day long, such a treat every day. x

Dan Wuori 的头像
Dan Wuori1 年前

You never know! Now that I’ve mastered the video editing skills of every 12 year old on TT the sky’s the limit! 🤣😂🤣

Ruthann617 的头像
Ruthann6171 年前

Baby number five!!! When my first started “conversing” like this, I would ask her a question and she would respond “Yes!” Followed by an animated string of babbling with facial expressions and hand gestures! It was amazing and hysterical !!!

Sydney Freedberg 的头像
Sydney Freedberg1 年前

One thing I miss is the highly expressive foot wiggles of the early, uncoordinated stage. When our firstborn was very new, she would greet us in the morning with what we called a “full body wriggle,” smiling and curling up and waving all four pudgy little limbs in the air.

Scotty Deez 的头像
Scotty Deez1 年前

These are the best and make my heart smile and bring back memories of my two children. Thanks.

Liv Efetobor 的头像
Liv Efetobor1 年前

My 6 week old daughter is cooing and smiling a lot. Just like the first baby. 2 weeks ago she was silent and looking pissed off so I love this new development.

Carmine Fields 的头像
Carmine Fields1 年前

I worked with toddlers and preschoolers for many years. I love little boys, but little girls are a special glimpse into the developing human mind because their communication is so much better, so much earlier. You’ll get these complicated stories of their worldview.

Liz🌿 的头像
Liz🌿1 年前

Thank you so much for this compilation. I'm bookmarking to possibly share with families I work with. It's helpful information when babies don't follow this progression. And interesting to think about how sometimes these kiddos become verbal but follow a different path.

Laura Wiley Haynes 的头像
Laura Wiley Haynes1 年前

Lat baby: the chin jut - fantastic 😂🤣

Strikketanten - gargoyless of Hecate 的头像
Strikketanten - gargoyless of Hecate1 年前

Our youngest was raised in a bilingual family, dominated by Danish because we outnumbered his Anglophone father 3 to 1. At four months, beginner babbler, we went to the UK to visit friends and family. When we boarded the ferry in Esbjerg, no other passengers spoke Danish, 1/

相关视频

From 0 to 60 in X seconds… For years that’s been one of the benchmarks used by auto manufacturers to describe the rapid acceleration of the world’s most powerful cars. It’s also a perfect metaphor to wrap up two weeks of posts focused on the language acquisition of young children. Babies enter the world with cries and gurgles… advance rapidly to complex forms of babbling, and generally speak their first words within a year. Their vocabularies growing exponentially, they begin stringing simple sentences together shortly thereafter and by two years of age, become surprisingly powerful little communicators. From 0 to 60 in just a little more than 24 months. It’s really amazing to witness. I began this series with video of a baby’s first sounds, captured in a hospital maternity ward. So what better way to conclude it than with an example of the end result? I got such a kick out of listening to this little one, age two, discussing her exasperation over the family dog’s need to bark at… well, everything. Check out not only her complex vocabulary and grammar, but her expression and tone… The way her personality is exposed through her vocalizations. Listening to her it’s hard to imagine that roughly 18 months prior she’d not yet spoken a single conventional word. Talk about acceleration! 🏎️ Of course this isn’t truly the end point for language development. Her vocabulary will continue to grow throughout her lifetime, for example… but the foundations of her lifelong success have been laid… transforming not only her ability to communicate but the very ways she is able to think. Language is arguably humankind’s most powerful tool. And it’s mastered rapidly by its most efficient and precocious little learners. This fantastic video was shared to IG by harperraeels.

Dan Wuori

101,413 次观看 • 1 年前

How does language begin? There’s a lot of important growth and development that occurs during the 45 month window from prenatal to age three. But among infancy’s greatest accomplishments is language acquisition. So over the coming week I’m going to dedicate this space to a series of posts on the sequential growth of language, which you may be surprised to learn begins even before birth. As your baby’s hearing activates between 18-20 weeks of gestation, they begin hearing their first sounds: Mom’s heartbeat, digestive rumblings, and voice. As you might imagine, sound isn’t crystal clear in the amniotic sac. (It’s not a perfect comparison, but consider how your own hearing changes under water in a swimming pool. You can still hear, but the sounds are muffled and significantly degraded.) For this and other reasons, your baby isn’t absorbing specific vocabulary at this point, but there’s little question that they are beginning to familiarize themselves with not only the tones/sound of their mother’s voice, but the distinct rhythms and patterns of her native language. We’re still only beginning to understand prenatal learning, but research demonstrates that in the minutes and hours immediately after birth, newborns already recognize their mother’s voice and can distinguish (and prefer) their own native language. That’s right: at birth babies’ brains have already begun organizing themselves around their mothers’ native languages. Pretty remarkable, no? It’s the first step in a miraculous process by which young children acquire complex linguistic ability over a period of just months. As for this precious little one, just minutes old, watch how he calms from a cry to an instant silence when exposed to the clear and familiar sound of his mother’s voice. Tomorrow we’ll look at the earliest forms of vocalization. This beautiful video was shared to YT by @lashaviouskirk9862.

Dan Wuori

121,931 次观看 • 1 年前

How does the presence of older siblings influence the development of language? This lovely video brought my mind immediately to research on the topic. There is some consensus that the presence of one or more siblings can correlate with slightly slower* language development among children who are not first born. This is because parents juggling the demands of multiple children generally have less time for one-on-one interaction. But research suggests that this the presence of a “cognitively sensitive” sibling can mitigate against such delays. What is “cognitively sensitive?” It’s this little guy. Notice how he not only takes time out to deliberately expose his newborn sister to language and vocabulary, but makes an effort to slow and simplify his language in recognition that he’s speaking with a baby. He shows the photos. He points (as he’s able) to match vocabulary with what’s on display. It’s like having a third, mini-parent. What a fantastic little teacher. *By the way, the delayed language often displayed by younger siblings is not anything to get too worked up about. Might they develop a little slower? In some cases yes. But do they catch up and close this gap? Also yes. In the long run, there’s also plenty of reason to believe that the presence of siblings can be advantageous. Though subsequent siblings may receive slightly less one-on-one time, they are often exposed to richer and more varied language due to the presence of older children in the home. What was your experience? This loving brother-sister pair was shared to IG by halesmoore.

Dan Wuori

418,388 次观看 • 2 年前

Check out this little mathematician! 🧮 After her aunt begins counting the steps, our hero takes over, counting to 11 with only one small assist… and leading her aunt to speculate about her special genius. You’ve probably learned by now that I am a believer in the genius of all children - and while this one is no exception, I want to take a moment here to spotlight the equal genius of her parents. While not pictured in this video, their presence looms large here. How did this precocious little one come to be such an adept counter? The answer is almost certainly that her parents have taken the time to expose her to many such opportunities. And you can do the same. Look for opportunities to count with your child. As you climb the stairs, as you clean up toys, as you cook… the opportunities are endless - and made all the more meaningful as you’re able to connect them not just to memorized (or “rote”) counting aloud, but real world opportunities to explore number and quantity. Notice how this little one has (mostly) established that with each step comes one and only one number. This one-to-one correspondence is a critical math skill, allowing us to associate quantity and number. (That the number three, for example, is associated with a set of three - and only three - objects.) So as we cheer this little genius along, let’s pause too to acknowledge the adults in her life that have provided the meaningful opportunities for practice that leave this proud aunt so dazzled. This expert counter was shared to TT by Jasmine.Lorimer.

Dan Wuori

150,785 次观看 • 2 年前

Now here’s a little guy who LOVES his pacifier. This is a topic I’ve avoided to date, largely because there are so many varying opinions on the matter. For me the question isn’t so much whether to use one, but for how long. Infants are born with a strong sucking reflex and pacifiers can help them to soothe and sleep. There’s even some evidence to suggest that sleeping with pacifiers might reduce the risk of SIDS. In short: for babies (up to a year), I’m a fan. But it’s not uncommon to see children with pacifiers well into toddlerhood, and in some cases, even beyond. And here I’d raise some cautions. Children who rely heavily on pacifiers may be more prone to middle ear infections. And dentists note that prolonged pacifier use can affect your child’s teeth and create bite issues. Perhaps most importantly is their potential to impact expressive language development. Your child’s ability to speak is an important one. After a point, language shapes not only the content of our thinking, but the very structure of our cognition. By otherwise occupying the mouth over long periods of time, pacifiers may slow language development by limiting opportunities for expression. Speaking with a pacifier in the mouth can also lead to distortion of speech sounds (even when they aren’t in the mouth). All told, I’m an advocate for beginning to wean off of pacifiers at around one year of age. The transition can be difficult - but not nearly as challenging as for a child who has become dependent over a period of years. Do/did you use pacifiers with your child? Why or why not? How did you help transition away from their use? This sweet little one (for whom a pacifier is still completely age appropriate) was shared to IG by voroujakeman.

Dan Wuori

335,600 次观看 • 2 年前