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It's becoming more and more popular. Parents are jumping at the chance to
teach their hearing babies how to sign using American Sign Language. Babies
as young as 6 months old are telling their parents they hurt and need
medicine. Think about how less frustrating your life as a parent would be if
your baby could tell you what was wrong with them?
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Diane Ryan, founder of Kindersigns, as well as a Speech and language
Pathologist is the expert when it comes to teaching the program of sign
language to parents. In 2001 Diane founded KinderSigns, a Florida based
practice devoted solely to teaching parents how to communicate with their
babies before they can speak. The following is an interview between Diane
Ryan and Liz Folger founder of Bizymoms.com and work-at-home moms expert.
Liz: Diane can you explain what baby sign
language is exactly?
Diane: Baby sign language is a way to communicate with your baby before
your baby is able to speak. Most babies can begin to understand speech
around six months of age. Baby sign language is a way of bridging that gap
between the ability of a baby to comprehend what you re saying and the baby
s ability to actually communicate, and you re bridging it with just a few
basic signs or gestures. You re not teaching your baby an entire sign
language. You re teaching your baby just a few basic signs so your baby is
able to communicate with you.
Liz: How young can you start teaching babies?
Diane: it depends on the baby. I would say in general between six and
seven months would be the earliest. there are certain things you should look
for to make sure your baby is able to communicate. Your baby needs to have
the physical ability to be able to produce the signs. They need to have
enough memory to be able to remember what signs you have taught him.
Liz: And when can you expect a baby to start
signing back?
Diane: Again, there are so many variables. It depends on the age of the
baby, how often you sign with the baby, and how committed you are to the
whole process. So in general I d say if everything is the optimum
conditions, if you start signing with your baby when they are seven months,
you sign continually and you re really into this, maybe around nine months
you might see some results. The older the baby the faster you re going to
see results.
Liz: Now, what are the benefits of signing to
your baby?
Diane: I think the number one question I get is, Is this going to impede
my baby s language development? and turning that around and making that a
benefit. Because when you do sign with a baby, your baby speaks earlier than
if you didn't sign. So there s absolutely no danger of any language delay or
- and it s kind of a logical question because most parents say, Well, if I
sign with my baby, if I give my baby an alternative way of communicating -
will my baby need to speak? And what happens is you stimulate the baby, what
you re doing is actually stimulating the baby s brain, and you are causing
him to speak earlier. There s no need for a baby to be frustrated.
There s a closer bond with parents, and long-range studies have proven
that signing babies have larger vocabularies, they speak in longer
sentences, and, remarkably, they have IQs as much as 12 points higher than
babies who don t sign. So, in one area after another signing babies
out-perform their non-signing counterparts.
Liz: You offer a Kindersigns Career kit where
someone can learn to teach parents to sign to their babies. Does someone who
buys your career kit need any special credentials or education to start this
business?
Diane: You don t need a high school education, you don't need a college
diploma, you don t need a Ph.D. You just need to study the kit and feel
comfortable with it - and you really need to want to help other parents.
Liz: Why would someone want to take a class on
teaching your baby sign language?
Diane: There are an awful lot of people that want that one-on-one
experience, that want to be able to ask questions that are not comfortable
or not that secure just by reading a book or learning baby sign language
from a website. I have found that by having a workshop, moms and dads able
to ask the questions, and it s also the social experience that really helps.
In fact one of the things that I found really worked, we had baby sign
language, baby signing parties where it was almost similar to a Tupperware
party in some respects. One mom would get ten of her friends together for
maybe a mom-and-me club and I would go and talk to their group and we would
all sit on the living room floor. And then after I taught them how to sign,
then they would go and have coffee and cake. It s the social camaraderie, it
s the personal experience, it s the ability to ask a question that you
would't be normally able to do.
Starting a baby sign language business in your area might be the perfect
business for you this year. If you would like more information about
starting your own Kindersigns business in your area visit: http://www.bizymoms.com/cart/careers/ksbo.html
About The Author:
Liz Folger is the founder of
http://www.bizymoms.com . Bizymoms.com is the leading online resource
for work-from-home ideas. The site offers home-based business start-up kits,
online classes, e-books, chats and enthusiastic support for moms who want to
have it all a family and a career. Visit http://www.bizymoms.com for more
information.
April 2006
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