Consonant sounds are appearing in your baby's babbleβ'ba,' 'da,' 'ma' are music to a parent's ears.
These activities encourage reduplicated babbling, support gesture-language connections, and build the phonemic awareness that leads to meaningful first words.
Your baby can sit independently now! This frees up both hands for exploration, so offer baskets of safe objects for them to discover.
Peek-a-boo is more than a gameβit teaches object permanence, the understanding that things still exist when hidden. Play it often.
If you're starting solids, let mealtimes be sensory play too. Squishing, smearing, and tasting are all learning experiences.
Fill a basket with safe textured objects and narrate what baby touches β smooth, bumpy, soft, crinkly β pairing sensory exploration with descriptive words.
Use soft rattles and your voice from different positions to encourage your baby to turn toward sounds β a foundational skill for language development.
Introduce simple signs for 'more,' 'all done,' and 'eat' during meals β giving your baby a way to communicate before words come along.
Snuggle up with a high-contrast board book and narrate the pictures using an animated voice β building your newborn's love of stories from day one.
Point to pictures in a sturdy board book and name them with enthusiasm β building your baby's vocabulary long before they can say the words themselves.
Play peek-a-boo with favorite toys, naming each one as it appears β combining the thrill of surprise with vocabulary building.