Greetings,
My name is Jason, I'm a 42 year-old (I actually had to do the math just now to figure that out) stay-at-home father to a 14 month-old daughter, Dava (diminutive for her grandfather, "David").
I also have a 19 year-old in college (we treat it like an airport, one takes off, another one lands =).
I'm a retired programmer, network engineer, amateur photographer and baby photographer (infant through pre-k).
I had read about the benefits -- namely the lessening of the so-called "terrible twos" -- of teaching ASL to infants so I began Dava around 4 months. She's now has roughly 25 words under her belt including some usage not explicitly taught.
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wlSWdZEtjI8]Dava's ASL - YouTube[/ame]
For example, we tend to use "finished" within the context of "are you finished with cereal?" or "finish chewing." The other day I was playing the part of the lion, chasing her around, turning around, letting her chase me, back and forth. She stumbled and fell, got up and signed "all done" to me. In other words, "I'm hurt, I'm done playing." I thought this was pretty cool.
I'd also heard the best way for a child to learn a language is to have one parent speak one language exclusively and the other parent speak the alternate language exclusively. So I'd been mulling over the idea of using only ASL to communicate to force immersion.
So I was wondering what the ASL community would think about such an undertaking, whether it's been tried before and with what degree of success, etc. It bears repeating that I am a non-native speaker of ASL and my daughter and I are, for the most part, learning in parallel.
Thanks much in advance!
My name is Jason, I'm a 42 year-old (I actually had to do the math just now to figure that out) stay-at-home father to a 14 month-old daughter, Dava (diminutive for her grandfather, "David").
I also have a 19 year-old in college (we treat it like an airport, one takes off, another one lands =).
I'm a retired programmer, network engineer, amateur photographer and baby photographer (infant through pre-k).
I had read about the benefits -- namely the lessening of the so-called "terrible twos" -- of teaching ASL to infants so I began Dava around 4 months. She's now has roughly 25 words under her belt including some usage not explicitly taught.
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wlSWdZEtjI8]Dava's ASL - YouTube[/ame]
For example, we tend to use "finished" within the context of "are you finished with cereal?" or "finish chewing." The other day I was playing the part of the lion, chasing her around, turning around, letting her chase me, back and forth. She stumbled and fell, got up and signed "all done" to me. In other words, "I'm hurt, I'm done playing." I thought this was pretty cool.
I'd also heard the best way for a child to learn a language is to have one parent speak one language exclusively and the other parent speak the alternate language exclusively. So I'd been mulling over the idea of using only ASL to communicate to force immersion.
So I was wondering what the ASL community would think about such an undertaking, whether it's been tried before and with what degree of success, etc. It bears repeating that I am a non-native speaker of ASL and my daughter and I are, for the most part, learning in parallel.
Thanks much in advance!