Milestones matter: What to expect in your baby’s first year of communication
The first year of your baby’s life is a whirlwind of growth and development. While watching them learn to crawl, walk, and grasp objects is exciting, it’s equally important to pay attention to their developing communication skills. Here are some key speech, language, attention, play, and communication milestones you can expect to see between 6 and 9 months.
Sounds:
- Babbling becomes more complex, with strings of sounds like ‘bababa’ or ‘dadada.’
- Your baby may start imitating some sounds.
- When you call your baby he or she will respond to his or her own name.
What you can do to help your baby
First, please don’t panic. Every baby is different and it does not mean your baby is delayed if he or she is not quite ready.
Make sure you spend time babbling, singing and talking to your baby in a tuneful, happy, sometimes silly! way, pulling faces, smiling, laughing and tickling your baby, all the while sing sing sing and chat!
Try to imitate your baby’s sounds and actions. You will see that your baby likes this a lot and will reward you with smiles, giggles and after a while your baby will want you to continue copying him or her. At that time you will see that he or she will start to copy you more and more.
Try and call your baby’s name lots of times. When you re-enter a room having been out for even a short time, say ‘Hello (baby’s name) I’m back’. Your baby will soon learn to look when you say their name.
Attention:
- Can follow simple directions (e.g., ‘Come here!’).
- Shows interest in books and pictures.
- Begins to understand the word ‘no.’
What you can do to help attention skills develop
Get down to your baby’s eye level or make it easy for your baby to look at you, even briefly.
Try and gain your baby’s attention when he or she is not busy with something else.
Try and become irresistibly funny and interesting to look at! Think of ‘Mr Tumble’! Wear a silly hat, silly glasses, blow some bubbles, blow a funny horn, stand on your head (joking)… make it impossible for your baby to ignore you!
Play:
- Explores objects by banging, shaking, and mouthing them.
- Shows interest in cause-and-effect toys (e.g., dropping objects and watching them fall).
- Engages in simple social games like peek-a-boo.
What you can do to help play skills to develop
Offer suitable objects that are attractive to look at and easy to hold and shake. Show your baby repeatedly what to do with these objects, bang them together and sing a little song, bang bang bang shake shake shake…
Offer containers and drop items into them. Shape sorters, metal bowls make a terrific clangy noise when you drop items into them. Blow feathers or tissues and watch them fall. Blow bubbles and watch them pop.
Sing a range of nursery songs repeatedly and make suitable actions along them. Try and involve your baby by sitting him or her on your lap so he or she can hear and feel you bopping him or her up and down, swinging him or her gently from side to side or row row rowing his or her boat gently down the stream
Communication:
- Uses gestures like waving ‘bye-bye’ and reaching for desired objects.
- May begin to use babbling to express needs and wants (e.g., babbling while reaching for a toy).
What you can do to help communication progress
Practise waving ‘bye-bye’ to people coming and going all day long.
When your baby babbles whilst reaching for a toy, you can copy him or her and then name that toy, for example.
Baby: ‘gagabbagaga’ – whilst reaching for a shaker – Adult: ‘gagagag I want my shakey! Aargh I am reaching for it but I can’t get it, help me help me… ah there is my lovely shakey shakey!’
If your baby is not responding to any of your efforts above then please do get in touch with a Speech and Language Therapist near you, or contact me via my contact form. Sometimes one consultation is all you need to get going with helping your baby and before you know it a lots of progress has been made and your baby is on the way to speaking!
Sonja McGeachie
Early Intervention Speech and Language Therapist
Feeding and Dysphagia (Swallowing) Specialist The London Speech and Feeding Practice
The London Speech and Feeding Practice
Find a speech and language therapist for your child in London. Are you concerned about your child’s speech, feeding or communication skills and don’t know where to turn? Please contact me and we can discuss how I can help you or visit my services page.