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#2. Communication from the newborn

May 29, 2017 Liz Donnelly
communication from the newborn - eardrops language series

Waah Waah! Pause. Waah Waah! Pause. What's that you say baby? Its language!

Starting with listening and kicking from within the womb, to gazing at their parents at only minutes old, babies communicate with the adults around them well before they say their first words. Number two in the eardrops language series is a whistle stop tour of the first six months. This first year can be so intense and it is helpful to have a basic understanding of how your little one is trying to communicate with you.

The number of words an infant hears during the first twelve months has a direct effect on how quickly they learn language later in the preschool years. So talk as much as you can with your baby because these early experiences with language are crucial to activate the brain, firing those neurons up! Babies contribute to their learning too by consciously observing, exploring, experimenting, and seeking information as best they can.

This is broad general development information, so don’t stress if your baby is doing or not doing these things - every personality is different and each baby creates their own individual journey to language.

Newborn to 3 months

Babies strive to connect with their caregivers from their first moments. Through a combination of watching, listening, crying and moving, they soon learn how to let you know when they need something.

Right from the start babies take in information at an astounding rate through every one of their senses. They have already been listening for months from inside the womb and in the early days they prefer human voices to all other sounds, in particular their mother’s voice. A newborn baby will stop crying when Mum and Dad talk to them and Mum and Dad will talk to help their new baby stop crying – the beginning of deep communication within the family.


Mother and baby move in tune to the voice and sounds of each other - a beautiful dance that babies start within 20 minutes of birth. That’s biology baby…


Although babies recognise their Mama’s sound and smell from the first moments, they know and prefer her face within a couple of weeks, deliberately smiling at her from about 3-6 weeks. They start off seeing best at a distance of around 20cm, spot-on for when they’re being held close (newborn snuggles, genetically programmed to be perfect). Babies love to gaze at faces. Even very young babies will seek out the human voice to discover the face attached to that voice.

Newborn babies communicate with their head movements too, holding still and focussing intently when interested and turning away when they’ve had enough. Other body gestures start early - even the youngest infants open their mouth, poke their tongue out, and at a few weeks old, flail their arms about.

Even though babies are too young to understand what’s being said, parents and caregivers usually treat them as if they do, by looking directly at them during the conversation and pausing after they speak to give the baby a chance to respond. This is so helpful because it teaches the baby the rituals of our communication – taking turns, using facial expressions, nodding, smiling, and generally reacting to one another. By about 6 weeks baby will likely be vocalising, cooing and ‘talking’ back during the conversations (so cute!) Language expert Robert E. Owens Jr says "children become communicators because we treat them that way" and Noam Chomsky is convinced we're born with a 'language acquisition device' in our brains.


Babies need to develop their memory in these early days to be able to remember language patterns later. Creating regular daily routines is a great start.


concentrating face

concentrating face

It is in these early weeks and months that caregivers set up routines with their babies, rituals around daily activities that actually create the framework for language development. Take bath time, for example. With each bath the same sequence of events happens and it’s likely that similar words are spoken too. Babies soon learn the sounds and patterns of those sentences and later work out that they mean something (but not for a while yet - words need to be heard thousands of times before these connections form). But its the routine that creates the space for baby to learn in.

 

 

3 to 6 months

Somehow over these next few months babies must make sense of what they are hearing and seeing in order to form meaning from it. A mammoth task – but they happily take on the challenge.

By around 3 months, babies know different people, and respond accordingly by smiling longer at their caregivers and choosing not to smile at strangers unless they want to. It may not be obvious, but babies are deliberately imitating people’s movements by now, as well as facial expressions and sounds. During these months a child will see thousands of facial expressions – imitating as many as they can. Caregivers can imitate back – hours of fun! This is the season of face-to-face play (later it becomes more about toys and moving to explore).

It is really tough to distinguish between individual speech sounds in the ‘stream’ of chat, but somehow babies start to do this during these months. At around 5 months baby will begin to vocalise more deliberately, talking to themselves in the mirror and to toys too, as well as people. They also usually respond to their own name by about 5-6 months.

There’s a particular way that caregivers talk with young babies that really helps their learning. We use a squeaky high voice, exaggerated pitch and tones, gestures, gazes, and facial expressions, and we leave long pauses to include baby in each conversation. People all round the world do this with babies, no matter the language they are speaking – this is programmed into us! Experts call this ‘Infant Directed Speech’ (IDS).

IDS is different from regular speech because the adults speak slowly and in short simple sentences, we talk about what’s going on in the immediate environment (nothing too abstract or theoretical), we only use a few words and repeat these throughout the conversation. And although we’re not usually aware of it, we only use a few distinct sounds in each conversation too.


Whether or not a baby can perceive speech patterns at 3-6 months has a direct relationship to how they understand words and phrases later.


Once babies start to learn the sound patterns of their soon-to-be native language (or languages) they organise the sounds into types and sequences. This is a huge step. Baby is learning that there are rules to language, as well as learning the individual words. Playing repetitive games is important during these months. Grandma’s got it right with the hours of ‘peek a boo’ and endless nursery rhymes!

Perhaps the biggest step of all that babies take towards language in these early months is that they develop the ability to consciously focus on something at the same time their caregiver does. Experts call this ‘joint attention’. This skill is particularly important for language development because its another key framework that babies can learn in. Mum, Dad, or caregiver will hold up a toy or other object to draw the baby’s attention to it, then they will both study it, and the adult usually names or describes it. In a few month’s time, baby will be the one holding the toy up and looking at their caregiver to start the conversation, which is another exciting step towards language, but for now the adult needs to take the lead.

Experience of language is vital during the whole of the first year, as a lack of exposure can have a seriously negative effect on a baby’s later language development. As a caregiver, you can do so much to help your child with their language. This is the second post in our Language series 'Follow your child’s journey to language with Eardrops'. Next up we take a look at the language mountain that babies climb between 6 and 12 months and after that, see why primary caregivers are vital in a child's journey to language. 

Ngā manaakitanga (with best wishes), Liz xx

Next up:

#3. 6-12 months and language
#4. The importance of primary caregivers
#5. Why are gestures important for language?
Dr Newbury's research

Information for the Eardrops blog language series was guided and overseen by Dr Jayne Newbury, Researcher in Child Language (University of Canterbury), with the comprehensive information in Language Development: An Introduction by Robert E. Owens, Jr. (2015). This post was written by Liz Donnelly, creator of Eardrops, audio stories that help develop listening skills and improve everyday language in young children.


In Learning language Tags language series, Dr Jayne Newbury, newborn language, newborn communication, language series #2
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#1. Language is complex! Where to start?

May 22, 2017 Liz Donnelly
Eardrops blog language series title page post 1 what is language

Hi. Kia ora! How are you? Fine thanks. What’s that you say? Its language! Say what?

Language is a creative tool we use to communicate with each other, a productive, evolving, socially shared code (who loves the word 'code'?) The ability to use symbols (words) to organise our world and express our experiences is described by expert Robert E. Owens, Jr. as “the premier achievement of humans”. The average adult English language user uses 150 words a minute, choosing these from between 30,000 and 60,000 alternatives. The mind boggles... how on earth do we even begin to learn this? Thats the challenge our children fearlessly face every day with grace and good humour (well, mostly).

There are a staggering 6000 languages spoken throughout the world. Learning even one of these languages is a ridiculously complex process, although experts agree that the human brain does seem ‘wired’ for it. There are three steps we take to learn language, and we fire up multiple areas of our brain as we do it.

  • We learn how to listen and focus so we can decode the sounds within a word, then decode the whole word.
  • We relate that word to its meaning (we have to create our own little dictionary inside our head for this).
  • We use precise speech muscles to form a shape with our mouth to speak that word out loud.

Isthmus, anyone? 


It is vital that children hear a lot of language spoken to and around them in their early days and months, because the number of words an infant hears has a direct effect on how quickly they learn language later in the preschool years.


baby listening to adult

Most of us learn language by listening. Children do actively contribute to their own learning by watching, listening, and experimenting with sounds (collective sigh, as we recall our cute babies babbling away in gibberish, naaaw).

Although we can communicate by writing, sign language and drawing, most language is transmitted by speech. On that note, children spend much of their first year experimenting with their vocal range, preparing to speak later. They produce many different sounds and little by little they fine tune them to match their native language - so clever and cute. Regardless of the language being learned, it appears that the first few sounds we make are the same the world over - sounds like ‘m’, ‘w’, ‘b’, and ‘p’. Our babies are actually born with the ability to create and use every sound combination possible, but they lose this potential if the sounds aren’t being used around them. Umm, no pressure!


Early language learning is all about patterns. The little linguists near you are listening all the time to work out the common sounds and phrasings of the language spoken in the home. 


Kids don’t try and learn thousands of alternative words – they learn the base patterns then ‘freeflow’, which cuts down brain admin time and results in surprising (and so cute) word combinations. A universal favourite with parents is how children say 'goed' instead of 'went' - such fun.

Understanding a language is so much more than simply being able to say the words too. When we speak we use a lot of gestures, facial expressions, eye contact and body posture, which all communicate meaning - Robert E. Owens Jr says that these can carry up to 60% of the information. Remarkable, really! We also speak faster or slower depending on the setting, we emphasize words within a sentence, and talk in a higher pitch to turn a sentence into a question (the Kiwi accent does this with almost every sentence just for fun eh). By the way a child soon figures out that a long pause after they make a request usually means they’re going to get a NO answer. Yes parents, your pauses say so much!

Our genetics provide the brain structure and developmental timings - the rest comes down to individual personality and what we experience. Kids learn using all of their senses – linking and intertwining their hearing, sight, touch, taste and smell to make sense of the world (more about how we learn to listen here). As a caregiver, you can do so much to help your child with their language, and its helpful to have a basic understanding of how our language develops in the early years.

This is the first post in our Language series 'Follow your child’s journey to language with Eardrops'. Next up - check out 'Communication from the newborn' and 6-12 months. Language starting to land!  

Ngā manaakitanga (with best wishes), Liz xx

Next up:

#2. Newborn communication
#3. 6-12 months and language
#4. The importance of primary caregivers
Dr Newbury's research

Information for the Eardrops blog language series was guided and overseen by Dr Jayne Newbury, Researcher in Child Language (University of Canterbury), with the comprehensive information in Language Development: An Introduction by Robert E. Owens, Jr. (2015). This post was written by Liz Donnelly, creator of Eardrops, audio stories that help develop listening skills and improve everyday language in children.


In Learning language Tags language, communication, Dr Jayne Newbury, language series, language series #1
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