By Learning To Talk Helps A Child To Read
As soon as your child is born into this world, his senses are constantly stimulated by all that is
around HIM. He may not be doing much besides crying, yawning and cooing, but he is constantly surrounded by sounds
and people talking. As his vision starts to improve, he can identify faces as they come close to his face and
making noises as they come near.
His vision begins to develop. In his infancy, he is already trying to converse, but all he can
produce are baby sounds in answer to adult talk. Although his senses are ready, Mother Nature prefers to proceed at
her own steady pace. This is when you as the parent, can play your part. You can sing and talk to your child and he
will soon try to mimic you, trying to say those syllables and sounds which sound gibberish to us. He is listening,
developing his auditory sense. Your baby watches and listens as you and others talk, observes that talking is often
followed by things happening.
He associates sight and sound and becomes aware that when he ‘talks’ things happen too. The more
interactions there are between you and your child at this stage, the sooner your child will develop his senses. The
thinking and feeling processes are also developing, and with them a curiosity and interest in his surroundings, a
thirst for knowledge. Stimulating this process will enhance his ability to make connections, to assimilate, and
later to analyze and give meaning to objects and words and the connections between them.
It is important for you to interact at this stage, to your child’s development. When he listens to
your voice talking or singing, it leaves a deep impression on him. He wants to talk to you and it shows in his
interaction to your actions and the sound you make. The responsive mechanism within him and his eagerness to
participate pushes him to communicate with you, through the means you have shown - talking.
There is a positive effect on the ability to read when the ability to talk develops early in a
young child. Listening to his own voice acts as a powerful stimulus for your child. For instance, as he utters the
word “puppy”, there is a delight within him and it shows. He may not understand why, but it is because he is
exploring his own potential. As an adult, you can understand why and you take delight in hearing your child
talking. You may spontaneously clap your hands or in some other way communicate your pleasure to your child. He
reciprocates and in delight, wants to repeat the experience. In effect, his auditory and visual senses are
stimulated.
Nursery rhymes are useful and do play an important role. Most have an auditory appeal that can be
irresistible and can function as an educational tool. Their strong appeal lies in their rhythm. The rhyming works
stimulate hearing and impart a useful lesson; the ability to distinguish between two words. Consider the simple
nursery rhyme:
Twinkle twinkle little star, how I wonder what you are
Up above the world so high, like a diamond in the sky
Try it on your child with a bit of action. Initially he will enjoy the catchy, lively rhythm. He
will begin to beat time to it and it will make him want to sing along. He will start singing, unsteady at first,
possibly stumbling over the words, and then with increasing confidence. As he sings, he will develop the ability to
make that fine distinction between the rhyming works, star and are, high and sky. The constant repetitive quality
characteristic of nursery rhymes gets through to him as well so that simple words and meanings can be learned in an
enjoyable way and practiced through repetition. This is how children learn to read, and you baby indeed can
read.
Developing the ability to associate things is the first step in learning to read. The earlier your
child learns to talk, the earlier a foundation is laid for reading. Reading is speech written down or put in
another way, talk in print. When you encourage your child to talk, you are also encouraging him to use a natural
human ability, his hearing. This is the focus of most early childhood development program to teach young children
or babies reading. He says what he hears, which stimulates him. He wants to learn, more and more, to explore
further the new phenomenon he has discovered.
Recommended reading...
For more information on early childhood education and how to increase your child's intelligence,
you'll probably want to take a look at the Genius Maker Program. It’s an exciting new program to teach your child not only to read, but
learn mathematical skills and gain an encyclopedic knowledge. Well worth checking out!
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