With lots of love and praise, you’ll enjoy encouraging your nine-month-old to move on to new achievements. Toys that respond to actions will reward your baby with fun surprises … and reward you with an “I did it!” expression.
She adjusts her posture as she moves, using furniture to steady herself
If a ball is rolled right to him, he can catch it
Her movements are more varied and deliberate
He can indicate with gestures, perhaps waving goodbye or lifting his arms to be picked up
She may follow your gaze
He can reach for a toy without falling over
Her hands are more dexterous; she can pass objects between them
Stacking, sorting and building toys
Brilliant Basics™
Baby’s First Blocks
Brilliant Basics™ Rock-A-Stack®
Help your baby learn more:
Build it and they will play. Build a pile of blocks for baby and a pile for you. Stack up your blocks, pointing out which one is at the top and the bottom. Encourage baby to play along, either "helping" you build your pile or building with his own blocks. The most fun is likely to come from baby knocking over your pile … again and again!
Simple shapes. For shape-sorting, start simply. Let baby get the hang of putting the round shape through the round hole, then move on, going from simple shapes to ones that need more maneuvering to make them fit. You’ll help baby gain confidence this way.
Colour intro. Use the toy's features to introduce your baby to various colours, saying each colour name clearly as you point it out on the toy.
Toys that encourage crawling, standing or cruising
Brilliant Basics™
Walker-to-Wagon™
L&L PUPPY LEARNING CAR
Lights & Sounds activity table
Help your baby learn more:
Surprise. Sit with your child on the floor and point out different surprises, colours and shapes on the toy. Most easy-to-activate features will be near the bottom, within easy reach for baby.
Use words and descriptive terms as much as possible in "conversations" with your baby; children of this age enjoy listening and vocalizing.
Move and groove. Exercise baby's growing muscles by encouraging her to push or crawl after a toy. Can she pull herself up and stand holding onto it? Give her lots of encouragement and you'll find out!
Toys with dials and buttons
Laugh & Learn™
Learning Letters Mailbox
Laugh & Learn™ Smart Screen Laptop
Lights & Sounds activity table
Help your baby learn more:
What do you think? Demonstrate activities on the toy, then encourage your child to do the same: "I turned the dial … now it's your turn!" "Do you think we'll hear a sound when you press the button?" Simple mechanics will hold your child's attention – and improve fine motor skills at the same time.
So many colours! Help your child learn to recognize colours by pointing out each one and slowly saying its name. Reinforce the learning by pointing out things in baby's world that are the same colour: "See? Your shirt is red too."
More to learn. Down the road, your child will be ready for letter, number and shape recognition. You can help things along by pointing these out on the toy, and then pointing out matching ones you see in everyday things around you.
Toys that encourage language development
Growing Baby™ Fun Sounds Flip Phone
Laugh & Learn™ Learning Puppy™
Laugh & Learn™ Counting Friends Phone
Help your baby learn more:
Talk to your baby as often as you can. As you talk through daily activities, you’ll introduce baby to the basic patterns and rhythms of speech.
Taking turns is another great activity. Initiate the "conversation," then listen and wait as your baby gazes back into your eyes and responds with a coo or babble. Say something back to help your child understand the idea of dialogue.
Mimic your baby's coos and babbles, which are critical for practicing how to make sounds, learning the ways sounds differ and how they can be combined.
Start reading to your baby early and instill a love of books. When you read together, point out pictures and encourage baby to point to them, too. Make the sounds of animals in books, or the sounds that other things make.
Children develop at their own pace and reach milestones at different times. The highlights mentioned in this website are approximate guidelines only. If you have any questions about your child's development, consult your healthcare provider.
Baby-Okey
Average Rating
Your baby will soon be talking, but before she leaves those funny little noises behind, capture those squeaks and squeals on tape to keep and play back over the years.
Materiais
Cassette tape recorder and tape
Infant seat
Instructions
Insert a fresh tape into a portable tape recorder.
Seat your baby in her infant chair and sit down beside her.
Turn on the tape recorder and talk to your baby, make mouth noises, vocalize in a variety of ways, and so on, to get your baby to talk back.
Pause between your vocalizations so your baby has a chance to answer you.
After you’ve both made some funny noises, turn off the recorder and play back the tape for your baby.
Save the tape and play it back when your baby is grown. (Maybe in the presence of her boyfriend!)
Safety
Don’t play back the sound too loudly, to protect your baby’s hearing.
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