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Friday, July 26, 2013

Using Sign Language with my Daughter with Down Syndrome

Little Cora Bean is a pretty enthusiastic signer.  I often get questions and comments on signing with her, so I thought I'd share a bit about our experience so far.

Using sign language with Cora is something that I decided I wanted to do pretty early on.

Although there are still some people that feel that signing can delay speech by causing a child to rely on signs to the extent that speech doesn't seem necessary, the information and research out there overwhelmingly supports the use of sign language with children.

I personally felt that adding a second language could only help benefit her early learning.  And with all the information telling me that people with Ds are typically visual learners, and that speech can often be significantly delayed, I wanted her to have a way to communicate early on.  From my reading, I felt that Total Communication (using signs, visuals, pictures, etc. at the same time as the spoken word) would also help to enhance her understanding and command of spoken English.

So I knew I wanted to sign with Cora, but I knew absolutely nothing about it.  I took the advice of many of the parents on my forums, and ordered Baby Signing Time videos, and later Signing Time videos.

Cora started watching the first episode of Baby Signing Time at about 8 months old.  She loved it.  She would get excited and watch, enraptured.  I learned those 20 or so signs and started trying to incorporate them into our lives.

But it was hard to remember.  I felt like I wasn't being very consistent.  So I started incorporating the signs I knew while reading books and singing songs to her.  It seemed to make it more exciting for her, and it helped me really learn the signs and get into the habit of using them.

For several months Cora watched the first episode daily.  Around 12 months old, she got a few more and we put them into rotation.  Although at first I was concerned about overwhelming her with too many signs, I began exposing her to a variety of videos and signs.  It seemed that she was quietly taking it all in, like any child does as they begin to absorb and learn language.  Language learning is not done in just a few words at a time, even though that may be all a child is capable of expressing.  I felt that she needed to be exposed to a rich variety of signs and vocabulary and that eventually it would pay off.  She was getting lots of input, but we still made an effort to focus intently on specific signs for a couple/few weeks at a time.

Eventually she began to show us what she was learning.

She began to sign at about 13 or 14 months.  She used just a few signs for several months, (milk,eat, more, Daddy, all done).  And then suddenly, she began to show me that she knew many more.  She'd  often debut 5 or more new signs a day.  They really had been sinking in all along.

Right now we have 17 Signing Time videos, and check more out from the libraries. (A great idea if you're not ready to buy.)  Cora loves them all.  She signs along to them, and usually knows what sign Rachel will show her next.  She signs along to the songs and translates what she hears into signs all day long.  She signs about what she sees, what she hears, what she thinks and remembers, and what she wants. 

Although my recent estimates put her vocabulary at over 500 signs, she continues to learn more all the time.  To supplement her Signing Time addiction, we look up new words on Signing Savvy. She is starting to string together word after word after word, in long random and excited sentences, leaving her mama (typically fairly good at interpreting her) in a confused haze some of the time.

I admit that her fine motor isn't perfect and that a lot of her signs look alike.  There is still some guessing involved.  And even though she has the tools to communicate with me pretty well, some times that's just not what happens.  It can sometimes take effort to draw out meaningful communication.

But she is communicating.  And that's a big deal for a girl whose speech is coming along fairly slowly.  She is beginning to use her word approximations with signs and to vocalize more and more.  And I know that one day, as she gets better at communicating with spoken language, she will likely start to use signs less and less.

I know that for many parents of children who do have or who are likely to have speech delays, signing can seem daunting.  It's hard to know how to start, and many kids aren't immediately enthusiastic about it.  For some children who are really movement-driven, getting them to sit down long enough to watch a video is a challenge. (Watching DVDs in the car can make for a captive audience.)  There can definitely be some hurdles.  We were lucky that Cora has been so interested and I am sure that is why she has taken to it so well.  But I am seeing really good progress in kids that weren't nearly as interested, even as their parents have relaxed their pace to reflect their child's motivation.  Sometimes it takes a while for our kids to show us what they have learned, but they are learning all the same.

From my perspective, teaching my daughter and my family to sign has been one of the best decisions we have made so far.  


13 comments:

  1. Baby Baby Baby Signing Time! Our journey with signing sounds similar although we are no where close to 500 signs! Way to go Miss Cora and Leah! I love Signing Time and Signing Savvy. Both have been a tremendous help in communication and decreasing tantrums. Signing Time has also helped with site reading as I am sure you have figured out--because they put the word up, then she says it and signs it.

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  2. We just started watching the Baby Signing Time videos--about a month ago. My one-year old loves to watch them. Though he still isn't signing anything yet, we continue to watch them and sign throughout our daily routine...plus they sign at his daycare which is great. I figure I'll just keep inputting and he'll maybe start signing soon. I think it's a great way to communicate, especially when speech is delayed. Cora is rocking the signs!!

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    1. Crystal: Sometimes it's hard to wait for the signing to start. But it can take a while. Now Cora learns signs the first time. It's pretty crazy to see. I'm glad we gave it a few months, rather than thinking it wasn't working and stop.

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  3. Go Cora - 500 signs is amazing! We love signing with Ben - and my whole family thinks that Rachel from Signing Time is a rock star. :)

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  4. For me, sign language is a life raft. I wouldn't be able to communicate with Owen at all if it weren't for ASL. Owen has about 100 words at this point, but he's been showing interest lately in new words, so I keep looking things up. We had the Signing Time dvds but he really wasn't interested in them at all (I literally held onto them for over 3 years and then gave them away to a mom with a new baby with Ds because we didn't get anywhere with them). He does however enjoy the Signing Time books, so I bought a bunch of them and we read them like crazy.

    Is Cora signing "mom" in the photo? She's adorbs!

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  5. Sign was a big deal in our house but we didn't come anywhere near 500 signs!! Cate was already speaking by the time I found Ds mom blogs and learned about Signing Times. We used to call it "Cate signing" because she would learn a sign then adapt it for her own use so it was easy for us to recognized but an outside wouldn't have a clue. Still it got the job done - Cate never got frustrated during the time she was learning to talk. It was a long process for her but now I can't keep her quiet for 5 minutes without a good bribe!

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  6. Love the picture of her signing mama :). Signing was one of the best things we did with Charlotte, helped alleviate a ton of frustration due to not be able to vocalize her needs/wants. Way to go Cora!

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  7. I agree 100%. It's one of the best things we did with Kamdyn.

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  8. Awesome post, babe! I agree that getting involved with sign language has been very good for Cora. It has also helped me a lot ;-) I always felt bad and kind of unsophisticated that I was monolingual. Now I can say that I'm learning a second language; that it surpasses the verbal communication that we all use really intrigues me, as well. Signing is universal and has more power than just another spoken language. It breaks down the barriers of ethnicity and nationality and allows people from all over the world to communicate with one another. Very cool...

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  9. Love sign language! Ben wasn't ready, though, until after age 2 to begin signing. I was starting to get worried but all of the sudden he began!

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  10. It’s nice to know that Cora is enjoying her signing lessons. It definitely helped you communicate with each other more easily. There’s nothing more precious than being able to talk with your kids, regardless of the means you might use. Thanks for sharing!

    Terry Robberson @ MedCare Pediatric

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  11. Such an alluring article published by you. I merely admire the way you explain common points in detail and make it easy for the readers to grasp. Keep up with this tremendous work. Continue blogging. One can speak and practice English in an effective way, just by downloading English Learning App on your own smartphone, which you can use whenever and wherever you want to practice your communication skills with experts.
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