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Baby Signing For Dummies

 (Google eBook)
Front Cover
6 Reviews
John Wiley & Sons, Apr 20, 2011 - Family & Relationships - 284 pages
Have you thought about signing with your baby or toddler? Parents and caregivers are discovering the benefits of using American Sign Language (ASL) to communicate with children long before they can speak. Some studies show that signing babies talk sooner, have larger vocabularies, and have fewer tantrums!

Baby Signing For Dummies gives you the skills to connect in a meaningful way with your hearing baby or toddler. Packed with more than 150 illustrated signs, this friendly, easy-to-follow guide shows you how to use simple hand gestures and baby-specific signing techniques to start interacting with your baby. Every sign is accompanied by step-by-step directions and an illustration—from meeting and greeting, people, and mealtime signs to clothes, animals, outdoor signs, and, of course, bath time and bedtime. You’ll discover how to:

  • Introduce signs to your baby
  • Incorporate signing into daily life
  • Make everyday events easier with signs
  • Overcome stumbling blocks
  • Decrease fussing and crying through signing
  • Help your baby sign combinations of words
  • Keep your baby safe with signing
  • Get the whole family involved
  • Find outside help (Web sites, videos, and signing schools and courses)

Complete with illustrations of the entire ASL alphabet, signing dos and don’ts, and ten songs to sign along with, Baby Signing For Dummies is the key to enhancing communication with your child and increasing his/her intelligence in a simple, fun, and rewarding way!

  

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Baby Signing to have SMARTies

User Review  - ame16 - Overstock.com

I gave the book as a gift and I understand it was very useful. I know the parents that received it were very pleased and surprised at how their baby could talk to them, before talking age. I wished I had that book when I had my babies over 40 years ago. Those Dummies are so Smart ;-) Read full review

Review: Baby Signing For Dummies (For Dummies (Language & Literature))

User Review  - Bianca - Goodreads

Reminds me of Meet The Fockers. Too funny. Read full review

All 6 reviews »

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Contents

Introduction
1
Getting Onboard with Baby Signing
9
Introducing Signs to Your Baby
17
Warming Up Signing Boot Camp
23
ClawC
25
Ready Set Sign
35
A Few Everyday Needs
46
Veggies
59
How Do I Feel Today? Signs
80
Angry
81
Happy
82
Sad
83
Scared
84
Safe
85
Sorry
86
Smile
87

Carrots
60
Peas
61
Lettuce
62
Got Dairy?
63
Cheese
64
Cereal
65
Cracker
66
Spaghetti
67
Fun Food Desserts
68
Cookie
69
Signs to Help Keep Baby Safe and Sound
71
Hot
72
Cold
73
Stop
74
Wait
75
Careful
76
Help
77
Sick
78
Medicine
79
Laugh
88
Cry
89
Bath and Bed Signs
91
Bath
92
Water
93
Bubbles
94
Getting Ready for Bed
96
Tired
97
Signs for Everyday Life
106
Stuff That Keeps Baby Toasty Outside
112
Signing in the Great Outdoors
137
Now Were Talking 161 Chapter 11 Signing Sentences
163
Overcoming Stumbling Blocks
173
The Part of Tens
185
Appendixes 217 Appendix A The ASL Alphabet
219
ASL Numbers
227
Index
243
Copyright

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About the author (2011)

Jennifer Hill Watson is the mom to three signing children. She began signing with her first daughter when her daughter was about 6 months old. At 41⁄2 years, her oldest now has over 300 signs. Jennifer’s second daughter is nearing 300 signs at age 31⁄2. Her son has 116 signs and 154 words at 19 months.
A former teacher, Jennifer has taught in both private schools and Houston public schools. She teaches signing classes for babies and their parents in the Houston area and helps lead the Houston Signing Babies support group both on the Web and at regular meetings.
Jennifer also speaks at national conferences to teachers on using American Sign Language in the classroom. Jennifer works with McGraw-Hill/Wright Group’s Early Childhood Division as an Early Childhood Consultant and teacher trainer. She volunteers as director of a preschool choir and leads confirmation classes with sixth graders in her church.
She has a bachelor of science from Texas Wesleyan University in Fort Worth, Texas. Jennifer and her family currently live in Katy, Texas.

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