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    Objectives:
    • Identify typical language and communication milestones for infants and toddlers.
    • Discuss the role adults can play in supporting the communication skills of infants and toddlers.
    • Discuss what to do if you are concerned with a child’s development.

    Learn

    Learn

    Know

    Infants and toddlers are able and ready communicators. They communicate through gestures, sounds, facial expressions, movements, and language. This next section will highlight language and communication milestones for infants and toddlers. It will be followed by a section that discusses these milestones by introducing three aspects of language and communication that caregivers can think about: receptive language, expressive language, and conversation skills.

    Milestones

    Infants’ and toddlers’ abilities to communicate grows as they interact and communicate with others. In fact, the sounds, tones, and patterns of speech that an infant hears early on sets the stage for learning a specific language. They begin to understand words, express themselves using words and learn the rules of conversation in their language.

    Think of how exciting it is to hear young infants making new sounds each day, hearing an infant say new words, or listening to toddlers express themselves by stringing words together! The chart below highlights infant and toddler language and communication skills as they grow. Keep in mind that individual differences exist when it comes to the specific age at which infants and toddlers meet these milestones and that each infant and toddler is unique. As you may have already learned in the Cognitive Development and Physical Development courses, milestones provide a guide for when to expect certain skills or behaviors to emerge. Think of milestones as guidelines to help you understand and identify typical patterns of growth and development, or to help you know when and what to look for as young children mature. As an infant and toddler caregiver, you can use this information, what you learn from families and your own knowledge in the interactions, experiences and environments you create for infants and toddlers.

    Language and Communication Developmental Milestones in Infants & Toddlers

    6 Months
    • Responds to sounds by making sounds
    • Strings vowels together when babbling (“ah,” “eh,” “oh”) and takes turns while making sounds
    • Responds to own name
    • Makes sounds to show joy and displeasure
    • Begins to say consonant sounds (jabbering with “m,” “b”)
    12 Months
    • Responds to simple spoken requests
    • Uses simple gestures like shaking head “no” or waving “bye-bye”
    • Makes sounds with changes in tone (sounds more like speech)
    • Says “mama” and “dada” and exclamations like “uh-oh!”
    • Tries to say words you say
    18 Months
    • Says several single words
    • Says and shakes head “no”
    • Points to show someone what he wants
    24 Months
    • Points to things or pictures when they are named
    • Knows names of familiar people and body parts
    • 用2 - 4个字说句子
    • Follows simple instructions
    • Repeats words overheard in conversation
    • Points to things in a book
    36 Months
    • Follows instructions with 2 or 3 steps
    • Can name most familiar things
    • Understands words like “in,” “on,” and “under”
    • 说名字,年龄和性别
    • Names a friend
    • Says words like “I,” “me,” “we,” and “you” and some plurals (cars, dogs, cats)
    • Talks well enough for strangers to understand most of the time
    • Carries on a conversation using 2 to 3 sentences

    Learning to communicate is a unique process and specific to each infant, toddler and family. Many aspects of a child’s environment may contribute to challenges with communication development. A family may wonder about their young child’s communication and language development and feel uncertain about what they are observing, as well as what to expect. As an infant and toddler caregiver, you have an opportunity to learn first from a family and consider offering additional developmental information, including possible warning signs. The Kids Included Together can be a valuable resource for you (http://www.kitonline.org), as well as the developmental milestones and act early information located on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website,http://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/actearly/milestones/index.html. The table below also highlights possible warning signs for infants' and toddlers' language and communication development:

    Possible Warning Signs of Language & Communication delays in Infants & Toddlers

    Young Infants
    • Lack of interest in social contact (e.g., avoids eye contact)
    • Does not respond to the human voice or other sounds
    Mobile Infants
    • Infant stops babbling
    • Infant does not show interest in exploring and interacting with people and objects in a familiar environment
    • Infant does not follow or track where you point (around 9 to 10 months)
    • Infant does not show or point at objects (around 11 to 12 months)
    Toddlers
    • Has limited vocabulary
    • 只使用短,简单的句子(36个月)
    • Misunderstands questions most of the time (by 36 months)
    • Others have difficulty understanding him or her most of the time (by 36 months)
    • Displays fewer social skills and peer play interactions than other children at the same age (by 36 months)

    How Infants and Toddlers Communicate

    As you study the chart above, you may notice that some milestones are associated with infants’ and toddlers’ ability to listen to and understand language (receptive communication). Other milestones are associated with infants’ and toddlers’ ability to express themselves using sounds, movements, gestures, facial expressions and words (expressive communication), and some are associated with infants’ and toddlers’ knowledge and ability to engage in communication exchanges with peers or adults (social engagement). Let’s take a look at how these aspects of communication unfold as part of the remarkable development of young children during their first three years.

    Receptive communicationrefers to an infant’s or toddler’s ability to listen to and understand language. They begin to understand language as part of their nurturing relationships with responsive, trusting adults and are able to make sense of gestures, facial expressions and words well before they are able to verbally express themselves.

    Expressive communicationis the ability of infants and toddlers to express themselves through sounds, gestures, facial expressions and words. A beginning point for expressive communication is the infant’s cry. Cooing is another form of early communication and can begin as early as one month. By six months, you can hear new sounds like “ma,” “ba,” and “da.” By 18 months, you may hear toddlers using two- and three-word sentences, such as “me go,” or “more drink, please.”

    Social engagementinvolves the understanding and use of communication rules such as listening, taking turns and appropriate ways to use sounds and facial expressions. Conversations involve both understanding (receptive communication) and expressing (expressive communication). Infants and toddlers learn the ways to use sounds, gestures, facial expressions and words of their family’s language(s) when adults interact, talk, read and sing with them.

    Supporting Communication, Language, and Literacy

    Effective communication, language and literacy skills are important to young children’s self-expression, their development of social relationships, and to their learning. The foundation for these skills begins during the earliest months and years after birth. When families and caregivers engage in and sustain interactions based on an infant’s or toddler’s development and interests, they help strengthen their role as a partner in communication. In fact, research demonstrates that these skills depend greatly on language experiences during infancy and toddlerhood. Children who hear fewer words are engaged in less conversation before age 3 with their caregivers, and have dramatically smaller vocabularies than children who have richer early language experiences (Hart & Risley, 1995). Communication and language development happen best in the context of consistent, caring and responsive relationships.

    Your role as an infant and toddler caregiver offers opportunities to support these skills throughout the day. You can use your knowledge about communication and language development alongside your observations of the infants and toddlers in your care. Together, this information can create opportunities to partner with infants and toddlers to maintain an infant’s or toddler’s interest through communication. For example, during mealtime with infants and toddlers, you can maintain eye contact, smile, repeat and add meaning to the infant’s sounds, or follow a toddler’s eyes as they look at the green vegetables on their plate and then say, “You’re looking at your green peas. What else is green?” Or, talk about who is sitting next to an infant or toddler. “Who is going to sit beside you today at lunch, Tommy? Oh, look, Cassandra is going to sit beside you.”

    Your role as an infant and toddler caregiver also offers an opportunity to create an environment that provides what infants and toddlers need to become good communicators early in life. A communication-rich environment is characterized by intentional and frequent use of such strategies as:

    • Learning about communication and language development in infants and toddlers
    • Talking with and learning from families, as well as observing and identifying the developmental stage of individual infants and toddlers, and offering experiences and activities that can best support their development and learning
    • Adding words and ideas to best describe infants’ and toddlers’ understanding of experiences
    • Being responsive to infants’ and toddlers’ communication attempts and building on what they are expressing
    • Talking with infants and toddlers about the events of the day
    • Following infants’ and toddlers’ leads, cues, and preferences
    • Including new words in conversations
    • Embedding songs, rhymes and finger plays into daily routines and experiences
    • Describing infants’ and toddlers’ actions, interests, events, or feelings
    • Reading to infants and toddlers frequently and providing opportunities for them to engage with books and printed materials
    • Incorporating alternative ways and systems of communication, based on individual needs (e.g., using pictures or visual cues to foster communication)

    See

    Supporting Communication and Language

    Watch this video to learn about the role you can play in creating meaningful opportunities for communication and language with infants and toddlers

    Do

    了解发育里程碑是一个三角tant aspect of working with infants and toddlers. Learning about and understanding how infants and toddlers communicate will help you know how to support them in developing effective communication and language skills and what kinds of learning experiences to plan for in your early care and learning setting. Each infant and toddler is different. Therefore, it will be important to customize experiences and activities to meet their unique needs. Consider the following for each infant and toddler in your care:

    1. Understand and respond to families’ needs and preferences:

      If a family approaches you and shares concerns about their infant’s or toddler’s development, acknowledge their concerns and encourage them to talk to the trainer. The trainer is responsible when dealing with developmental concerns and he or she will begin the process for identifying or referring the child.

      Families with children under the age of 3 can contact their local early intervention program. A free evaluation of the infant’s or toddler’s development can be completed in order for the young child to receive services and support that meets his or her needs. Additionally, a pediatrician can perform developmental screenings and possibly refer the child to a specialist.

      Learn about the tools your program uses to help understand each child’s development. For example, your program might ask families to complete tools like the Ages and Stages Questionnaire (ASQ). This tool and others like it give your program information about each child’s unique development. Talk to your trainer, supervisor, or coach to learn more about the tools and processes your program uses and who to talk to if families have questions.

    2. Consider relationships as the foundation:

      Throughout your daily interactions and experiences with infants and toddlers, you can intentionally plan for opportunities to scaffold their emerging skills based on their unique strengths and needs, temperament and culture. Take time to learn from families and talk with infants and toddlers throughout daily routines; share with them what you are doing during feeding and eating, diapering and toileting, hellos and goodbyes, as well as before and after naptime.

      From families, we can learn about their home language. Many families speak languages other than English at home and it’s important to honor their home language within the early care and learning setting as they learn English. This helps infants and toddlers see a connection between environments, as well as understand concepts and learn to read and write in the future. For example, books in their family’s language can be included and shared within the care environment.

    3. Be sensitive to individual infant and toddler needs:

      Every infant and toddler develops communication and language skills at his or her own rate. However, infants and toddlers who are engaged by communication and language will try to listen to the sounds around them. If an infant or toddler does not respond to you while communicating or react to loud noises, these may be signs that he or she is having trouble hearing or has a developmental delay. Infants and toddlers that do not show an interest in expressive language will also need extra support in understanding their strengths and needs. If your program provides developmental screening tools, these can help you begin a conversation with families about your concerns. You should also talk to a trainer, coach, or supervisor in your program about ways to help the infant or toddler develop and learn in your early care and learning environment.

      You, along with the infant’s or toddler’s family, may also decide to use sign language, additional gestures, or visuals to help an infant or toddler communicate and understand language. Sign language, for example, can offer infants and toddlers a way to communicate before they can talk which helps enhance their language development and reduce frustration. Talk to your trainer, coach, or supervisor about whether your program offers training in sign language for babies.

      Some infants and toddlers may use different devices to help them hear and communicate. You can learn from the family how to use the device to continue to help the infant or toddler learn the sounds and words that make up language.

    Explore

    Explore

    Think about the infants or toddlers in your care. Using theLanguage and Communication Developmental Milestones Chartalong with theThinking About CommunicationActivity, highlight what you notice about their development and how you respond. Then, share and discuss your responses with a trainer, coach, or supervisor.

    Apply

    Apply

    You should continue to be intentional about your interactions and the experiences you offer so that infants and toddlers can build their communication skills and enjoy experimenting with sounds and words within relationships. Download and print theCaregivers Communicating with Infants and ToddlersActivity. Think about the strategies you are using to support communication development in infants and toddlers. Identify specific ways you apply the various strategies as well as new ways to consider using these strategies throughout the day. Then, share and discuss your responses with a trainer, coach, or supervisor.

    Glossary

    Term Description
    Developmental delay When children do not meet developmental milestones at the expected times. Delays can occur in any area of development
    Developmental milestones 一组技能或行为,大多数孩子can do within a certain age range
    Developmental screening A tool used to help identify children who are not developing as expected and who may need supports. Screening can be completed by pediatricians, teachers, and others who know both the child and child development well
    Expressive communication The ability to use words to communicate with others
    Receptive communication The ability to understand spoken words

    Demonstrate

    Demonstrate
    Assessment:

    第一季度

    Which of the following is typically a communication milestone for a 12-month-old?

    第二季

    True or False? Social engagement is the ability of infants and toddlers to express themselves through sounds, gestures, facial expressions, and words.

    第三季

    A parent approaches you and is concerned about his toddler daughter’s development. What should you do?

    References & Resources:

    Greenspan, S.I. with Benderly, B.L. (1998).The Growth of the Mind. Cambridge, MA: Perseus Publishing.

    Hart, B., & Risley, T.R. (1995).Meaningful Differences in the Everyday Experience of Young American Children. Baltimore, MD: Brookes Publishing.

    Nicholas, H., Lightbown, P., & Spada, N. (2001). Recasts as feedback to language learners.Language Learning, 51, 719-758.

    Smith, A. (1999). Quality childcare and joint attention.International Journal of Early Years Education, 7,85-98.

    Trawick-Smith, J. W. (2014).Early Childhood Development: A Multicultural Perspective,(6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education Inc.