
Alison Mackonochie
Author of Baby Sign Language
Works by Alison Mackonochie
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 20th Century
- Gender
- female
Members
Reviews
This book will not teach you to use signs with your infant that anyone, other than the two of you, will understand. "These signs" (says the author) "have been chosen for their simplicity" (they are in no way simpler or intuitive than actual ASL signs) "and are based on a mixture of 'official' symbols" (author's quotation marks, and what an arrogant way to express it) "and made-up signs. You can use them as they are portrayed or simply as a basis for creating your own... Go with your child's show more version." Would they suggest that you do this with English? Linguistic research suggests that the best way to encourage language acquisition is to acknowledge that you understand the baby, but to model proper language usage when replying. You don't imitate a toddler who substitutes F for the initial cluster in TRUCK, you say "Yes! That's a TRuck!". I'm not going to change the sign for "more" (one of the signs this book gets right) to the ASL for "hurt" because my grandson hasn't grasped how many fingers to tap together. This book, incidentally, instead of the actual sign for "hurt", substitutes something that a toddler would have difficulty distinguishing from the sign for "happy" -- but they've changed "happy" too. This would make me "angry", but (strange for such a useful word in the world of toddlers and tantrums) that word is not in this book.
The baby whose parents rely on this book won't have the positive experience of a two-year-old friend of a friend whose daycare staff enthused after his first day about how well the child communicated with his signs. I suggest finding a book with actual signs that you can rely upon other people understanding. show less
The baby whose parents rely on this book won't have the positive experience of a two-year-old friend of a friend whose daycare staff enthused after his first day about how well the child communicated with his signs. I suggest finding a book with actual signs that you can rely upon other people understanding. show less
Your Pregnancy: A Week by Week Guide: What to expect at every stage, from conception to birth and post-natal care; Expert advice and guidance for a healthy, happy pregnancy and baby by Alison Mackonochie
This book is good, but maybe doesn't have that much information week by week. I like the "What to Expect When You're Expecting" book a bit better, I think. But that could just be personal preference.
Handboek over zwangerschap van week tot week, tot en met het eerste levensjaar van het kind.
May 10, 2019Dutch
Statistics
- Works
- 16
- Members
- 115
- Popularity
- #170,829
- Rating
- 2.7
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 56
- Languages
- 3


