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	<title>Comments on: I Wanna Teach My Daughter Baby Sign Language. Is 6 Months Too Early to Start?</title>
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	<description>Learn Sign Language Lessons Easily and FREE</description>
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		<title>By: Crystal D</title>
		<link>http://easysignlanguagelessons.com/i-wanna-teach-my-daughter-baby-sign-language-is-6-months-too-early-to-start/comment-page-1/#comment-517</link>
		<dc:creator>Crystal D</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Mar 2009 14:57:42 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>6 months is not at all too early. I practiced sign language with my daughter from birth. Of course, she didn&#039;t really catch on until she was older, but it helped me to get in the habit.
Things to keep in mind : Don&#039;t expect your child to pick it up right away. If you start now, she might not do any sign language til 10 months, there&#039;s no set time line.
Keep it simple. I taught my daughter &quot;more&quot;, &quot;milk&quot;, &quot;eat&quot;, &quot;drink&quot;, and simple foods first (cracker, cookie, cereal, banana). As she grew older, I introduced more (night, day). But make sure to relate it immediately to something she can grasp. (say &quot;cracker&quot;, then sign it, and hand her a cracker. Say &quot;eat&quot;, then sign it, and take a bite of a cracker.)
My daughter is 2 and a half now, and still knows all the sign language I taught her, and still uses it occasionally, but she also talks extremely well. I think that teaching her sign language helped to reduce stress in her early days, because she could tell me what she wanted, and I didn&#039;t have to guess. It also introduced her to the concept of language that she could really comprehend, and I think that it helped to bond her to her family more securely!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>6 months is not at all too early. I practiced sign language with my daughter from birth. Of course, she didn&#39;t really catch on until she was older, but it helped me to get in the habit.<br />
Things to keep in mind : Don&#39;t expect your child to pick it up right away. If you start now, she might not do any sign language til 10 months, there&#39;s no set time line.<br />
Keep it simple. I taught my daughter &quot;more&quot;, &quot;milk&quot;, &quot;eat&quot;, &quot;drink&quot;, and simple foods first (cracker, cookie, cereal, banana). As she grew older, I introduced more (night, day). But make sure to relate it immediately to something she can grasp. (say &quot;cracker&quot;, then sign it, and hand her a cracker. Say &quot;eat&quot;, then sign it, and take a bite of a cracker.)<br />
My daughter is 2 and a half now, and still knows all the sign language I taught her, and still uses it occasionally, but she also talks extremely well. I think that teaching her sign language helped to reduce stress in her early days, because she could tell me what she wanted, and I didn&#39;t have to guess. It also introduced her to the concept of language that she could really comprehend, and I think that it helped to bond her to her family more securely!</p>
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