what do you want to teach this child?
2007-02-09 03:42:29
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answer #1
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answered by mamamia 2
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I taught my son nursery rhymes even when he was just an year old. The trick is child love to listen to things which are played either on a video or audio! Downloading from the website, may not work as you will not get what you really want. Try going to www.fabmall.com where you get everything for kids!
2007-02-16 05:47:29
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answer #2
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answered by indiangal 3
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I am glad you want your child to be smart and want to start early, but a word of caution, you child is still a baby, spend quality time with your child, if you are thinking about teaching the pressure from your side will be felt naturally by your child. this kids does not need this so early in life, Yes what you can do is, pronounce your words clearly, use only the right words instead of pee pee and do do. At this age play is the only way to teach the child, when you are cooking give a little dough for the kid to play with, let the child mess around a bit under your watchful eyes, treat your kids as your own play toy, it is fun to watch them do funny things, and your smile is a good resurance for the child, because mama's approval is very important. avoid the commands, instead you may choose to say "lets do it this way" respect the child;s feelings and give plenty of huggs. It is a very important age and emotional security is the need for the child. Encourage independence and allow the child to make choices, this builds sefl confidence...these are the things you can teach your child by being it. Good luck MOM and happy parenting!
2007-02-09 11:56:46
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answer #3
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answered by thachu5 5
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The major way you teach a child this young is by spending time playing with her. Get toys that are appropriate for her age and calmly and patiently demonstrate them to her and encourage her to join in. Sing songs, play music and dance, laugh a lot. Smiling will encourage her to smile back.
Count her fingers and toes and walk around the house pointing to things and naming them. "Read" her bright, colorful books. At this age, she won't have the patience to sit through a whole book while you actually read it, so instead, point to the pictures and talk about them--make up your own brief narrative. Demonstrate courtesies like "please," "thank-you," and "excuse me" by using them all the time. She will soon be mimicking everything you do.
It might surprise to hear that a child this young can begin to learn to do chores and help around the house. Give her small tasks to do alongside you, and she will do them with great joy. For example, give her a towel and a plastic bowl to dry or a small broom to sweep with. Tell her it's time to pick up the toys and then encourage her to help you. Recognize that giving her small things to do is not so much to really help you get the house clean as to teach her what it means to begin to help. It takes time, effort, and creativity on your part, and yes, sometimes it's just easier to do something by yourself, but if you take the time now to patiently teach her to help, later she will be a much better helper.
Set up a routine she can come to anticipate. Young children love predictability and repetition. For example, you could begin each day with the same silly song and dance, follow that with breakfast, clean up after breakfast and read a book, and so on.
2007-02-09 11:58:37
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answer #4
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answered by happygirl 6
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As long as she can grasp the basic math of Pi, she should be able to look up a few Internet sites, goodness, is your child developmentally slow or something? 1 year and three months, by then, my kid was designing websites. Take this child to see a doctor IMMEDIATELY!
2007-02-09 13:21:51
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answer #5
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answered by Honeypai 4
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play is the best form of teaching so you could interact with your child asking her to point out say a dog or a cat or if there is lots of things around that she wont know what they are you could say look at the policeman or what ever it is.go to a playgroup so you can chat with other mothers while your daughter builds up social skills mixing with other children,learning to interact and share toys.
2007-02-09 11:48:31
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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What are you trying to teach her? I teach my daughter with songs, play, and repetition. She is extremely smart - she has a vocabulary of 15+ words and she is only 10 months old.
2007-02-09 11:54:02
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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teach them what. my son is 15 months also and at that age everything they do has to do with learning. just playing is teaching them things. right now my son just loves to play with tupperware. i get all of it out and he stacks it up and puts containers inside each other. it's all a learning process. you're not going to be able to teach her colors or anything. not ready for that.
2007-02-09 11:43:04
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answer #8
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answered by redpeach_mi 7
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You need some teaching. Let the baby enjoy.
2007-02-11 04:17:13
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answer #9
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answered by ndeepuachari 2
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teach her from the small types of toys
2007-02-10 05:14:25
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answer #10
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answered by shabaz khan 2
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