Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shouldn't your child be learning to speak English? Or is there some sort of speech impediment?
Hope you aren't doing any screen time, as it often delays natural speech development.
A baby at nine months is much too young to be taught how to verbally communicate. That is what baby sign language is for.
Until the child can speak on her own, baby sign language lets the child articulate what she wants/needs.![]()
At what age are you thinking children can start learning to communicate verbally?
You continually speak to your baby while you are signing so there is no delay in receptive communication at all. A nine-month-old can sign "milk" but cannot say "milk" for example and it cuts down on the baby's frustration.
Are you a nanny?
Yes. I learned baby sign language in college and love teaching it to my young charges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shouldn't your child be learning to speak English? Or is there some sort of speech impediment?
Hope you aren't doing any screen time, as it often delays natural speech development.
A baby at nine months is much too young to be taught how to verbally communicate. That is what baby sign language is for.
Until the child can speak on her own, baby sign language lets the child articulate what she wants/needs.![]()
At what age are you thinking children can start learning to communicate verbally?
You continually speak to your baby while you are signing so there is no delay in receptive communication at all. A nine-month-old can sign "milk" but cannot say "milk" for example and it cuts down on the baby's frustration.
Are you a nanny?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shouldn't your child be learning to speak English? Or is there some sort of speech impediment?
Hope you aren't doing any screen time, as it often delays natural speech development.
A baby at nine months is much too young to be taught how to verbally communicate. That is what baby sign language is for.
Until the child can speak on her own, baby sign language lets the child articulate what she wants/needs.![]()
At what age are you thinking children can start learning to communicate verbally?
You continually speak to your baby while you are signing so there is no delay in receptive communication at all. A nine-month-old can sign "milk" but cannot say "milk" for example and it cuts down on the baby's frustration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shouldn't your child be learning to speak English? Or is there some sort of speech impediment?
Hope you aren't doing any screen time, as it often delays natural speech development.
A baby at nine months is much too young to be taught how to verbally communicate. That is what baby sign language is for.
Until the child can speak on her own, baby sign language lets the child articulate what she wants/needs.![]()
At what age are you thinking children can start learning to communicate verbally?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shouldn't your child be learning to speak English? Or is there some sort of speech impediment?
Hope you aren't doing any screen time, as it often delays natural speech development.
A baby at nine months is much too young to be taught how to verbally communicate. That is what baby sign language is for.
Until the child can speak on her own, baby sign language lets the child articulate what she wants/needs.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Shouldn't your child be learning to speak English? Or is there some sort of speech impediment?
Hope you aren't doing any screen time, as it often delays natural speech development.

Anonymous wrote:Thank you for the reply! Did they give you a video to watch or something?