minti, powered by parents Powered by Parents
First Visit?     Register     Login
 

This site gets better with user participation. Please participate... Some of the main things you can do is rate this advice, add comments to this advice, add links to and from this advice, and/or write your own advice.

  email  print
  report   
1.jpg
My Son and
Like this topic?
Write Advice
Add to Favorites
Advice that links to this one
ADVICE RATING
 (Highly recommend) (Highly recommend) (Highly recommend) (Highly recommend) (Highly recommend) 4.86 (Highly recommend) from 7 votes (175 Visits)

Get Your Kid to Remember Family Members

pfallerj by pfallerj Proud Parent(February 2007) (rank 95th)
Edit - Forgot to log-in before I posted. Sorry for the double post!

Your baby is probably just getting to the stage where he “gets stuff.” You show him how to throw a ball, and he throws it. You show him how to play peek-a-boo, and he laughs
and hides. Someone shows him how to scream at the top of his lungs, and unfortunately, he follows suit.

Now is the perfect time to start teaching him how to recognize family members. It’s very easy to do, and you don’t need the family member to do it. So you can teach your little one his wily tricks in secret, and then bust them out at the next get-together and steal the show.

What You Need

A picture of the person and some patience. When you’ve got your baby settled down or you’re reading him a story, pull out a picture frame or two. Point at the person and say who they are. Grandma, grandpa, etc. Even if they don’t get it exactly right, say “good job” and pronounce it right for them. They won’t get confused because you’re reinforcing the association, not the pronounciation. That’ll come with practice. For instance, my son says something that sounds like “Kaka” for grandpa, but he says it everytime he sees him.

At my son’s first birthday party, my Mom had lots of pictures of our family out. Since my son loves people, he made beelines for the pictures and pointed at people saying “dada” and “grandpa.” It’s a real crowd-pleaser and it’s good for their visual memory too.

Visit 365 First Time Parenting Tips: Toddler Edition
Subscribe to the tips
Any contributed content above is the subjective opinion of that member or external author, and not of Minti.com Pty Ltd. If you are searching for health related advice we strongly suggest you seek professional medical support. View our Terms of Service for more details.
ADVICE RATING
 (Highly recommend) (Highly recommend) (Highly recommend) (Highly recommend) (Highly recommend) 4.86 (Highly recommend) from 7 votes
Report
ExcellentExcellentExcellentExcellentExcellent
GoodGoodGoodGoodGood
AverageAverageAverageAverageAverage
PoorPoorPoorPoorPoor
Very PoorVery PoorVery PoorVery PoorVery Poor

Voting help


 
Add a comment on this article.

 

mumof1girl
February 2007 | mumof1girl
Great idea

 

This is a great idea, so when that particular person comes around they will who it is etc. Great advice again



Reply Reply Report

Related Tags

Addfamily, game, member, memory

Bookmarks

No bookmarks found

Know someone who would like this site? Refer a friend