Most children use hand gestures before they're able to talk. Here's what those movements could mean, explains vanessalobue
The use of hand gestures as a means of communication is particularly valuable for deaf children and adults.
My dad’s side of our family is nearly 100 percent Italian. As a result, I grew up immersed in Italian-American traditions, including large family gatherings with a lot of food and, mispronouncing words like mozzarella , and most importantly for this post, learning to talk with my hands. Gesture has the most obvious benefits for individuals from the deaf community, and research suggests that deaf infants and young children are particularly prone to using gesture to communicate. In the first year of life, around the same time that hearing infants begin to babble, deaf infants begin to babble as well, but they mostly babbleThere is also evidence that deaf children can develop a way to communicate with each other via gesture if they aren’t directly taught sign language.
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