ENCUÉNTRANOS EN LAS REDES

Facebook linkYoutube linkInstagram linkTwitter link
View post on Instagram
 
View post on Instagram
 
View post on Instagram
 
View post on Instagram
 
View post on Instagram
 
View post on Instagram
 
View post on Instagram
 
View post on Instagram
 
View post on Instagram
 
View post on Instagram
 

Únete a la familia,

Mantente al tanto

ÚNETE A NUESTRA COMUNIDAD

¡Regístrate para recibir consejos útiles, ofertas y mucho más!

ACERCA DE

Misión y FundadoresLas 5 SBlog

APOYO

Preguntas frecuentesRegistro de ProductoTarifas, envío y devolucionesPortal de DevolucionesContáctenos

COMUNIDAD

AfiliadosSocios Autorizados

LEGAL

Condiciones de ventaPolítica de PrivacidadPolítica de cookiesCondiciones de servicioContrato de licencia de usuario finalGarantía limitada de SNOOAviso legalDerecho de desistimientoPreferencias de cookiesTodos los términos legales

TIENDA

SNOO Cuna InteligenteArrullo SleepeaSNOObear Peluche con Ruido BlancoSNOObie Suavizador Inteligente

© 2026 Happiest Baby, Inc. | Todos los derechos reservados

Todas las marcas comerciales de terceros (incluyendo nombres, logotipos e iconos) referenciadas por Happiest Baby siguen siendo propiedad de sus respectivos dueños. A menos que se indique específicamente, el uso de marcas comerciales de terceros por parte de Happiest Baby no indica ninguna relación, patrocinio o respaldo entre Happiest Baby y los propietarios de estas marcas. Cualquier referencia de Happiest Baby a marcas comerciales de terceros tiene como objetivo identificar los bienes y/o servicios correspondientes y se considerará un uso nominativo justo según la ley de marcas comerciales.

    Happiest Baby
    BLOG
    FAQS

    TODDLER

    11 Science-Backed Ways to Boost Language Development

    Surprise! Your little one is not a sponge who will magically learn All The Words. Instead, you need to help boost their language skills. Here is how.

    Happiest Baby Staff

    Escrito por

    Happiest Baby Staff

    COMPARTIR ESTE ARTÍCULO

    Compartir en FacebookCompartir en TwitterCompartir en LinkedinCompartir en PinterestCompartir por correo electrónicoCopiar enlace al portapapeles
    Mum and toddler share a book, boosting language skills

    EN ESTA PÁGINA

    • Go all-in with babytalk.
    • Have baby conversations.
    • 'Read' picture books.
    • Read storybooks, too!
    • Put books on repeat.
    • Name everything!
    • Play pretend.
    • Embrace two languages.
    • Wiggle in new words.
    • Start counting.
    • Embrace some quiet.

    While it may take about a year (or more) to hear your little one’s first words, know that they have been honing their communication skills from the get-go. From the moment your baby is born, they are absorbing all the sounds, tones, and words around them, manipulating them in their growing brains to finally communicate with you. But do not be fooled! Your precious child is not a passive sponge, waiting to absorb All The Words. Instead, your small one needs your help to boost their language, comprehension, and speaking skills. Here, 11 scientifically proven ways to do just that.

    Go all-in with babytalk.

    The more you use so-called babytalk when communicating with your infant, the quicker they grasp language, notes a report in the journal Cognitive Science. Researchers found that favouring words that end in 'Y' (tummy, kitty, doggy, bunny, daddy) and those that repeat sounds (choo-choo, night-night) are the most effective. Earlier reports also found that exaggerating vowel sounds and raising your pitch are super-effective babytalk strategies. It is no wonder, since experts say that babies’ brains show increased neural activity when they hear sing-songy babytalk versus boring old grown-up speak.

    Have baby conversations.

    Starting at about 4 months old, your baby will begin to babble. (Squee!) But your baby is not being cute, just for the sake of being cute. They are communicating with you...so talk back! After all, responding to your baby’s babbles with words and sentences leads to larger vocabularies down the road, according to research in the journal PLOS One. Keep the back-and-forth going as your toddler grows. Conversations between little ones and their parents actually change a child’s brain, aiding language development, including vocabulary, grammar, and verbal reasoning, found Harvard researchers.

    'Read' picture books.

    Parents do not need to read words off the page of a book to impart language know-how to their kiddos. No matter if you share a book with a story or a book with just pictures, your child will reap the language-building rewards, according to a study in the journal Frontiers in Psychology. Researchers found that toddlers are privy to just as much sophisticated language and info when parents read picture books as when they read 'educational' books. The reason? Parents tend to ask questions (Where do you think the squirrel is going?) and make related observations (We saw a squirrel this morning in our backyard!) when sharing picture books.

    Read storybooks, too!

    Reading Goodnight Moon to a small infant may seem pointless, but rest assured, it is not! Sharing books with your child beginning in early infancy increases vocabulary (and reading skills) four years later, according to researchers at NYU School of Medicine. But do not stop there! Just one year of daily at-home read-alouds for a 4-year-old exposes them to 75,000 more words than if they were not read to at all. (All those words bulk up a vocabulary and aid early literacy development.) Moreover, kids who live in literacy-rich homes (averaging about 5 books a day) start kindergarten having heard about 1.4 million more words than tykes who were never read to. To get even more out of your story time, try these activities.

    Put books on repeat.

    So you have got a giant bookshelf brimming with tons of wonderful stories, but your nugget is always picking the same darn book over and over again. (Gah!)  But before you beg for a trade, know this: Research in the journal Frontiers in Psychology found that children learn more new words if a story is read to them multiple times than if several stories are read to them only once. So, yes, vary up your bedtime story go-tos…but only after you read Dragons Love Tacos three times in a row!

    Name everything!

    You know the drill: You are strolling down the sidewalk with your little one and you spy a dog. Doggy! A little further down the road, zooms a fire truck. Fire truck! Later, you pop into the ice cream shop and hand over a cup brimming with mint chocolate chip. Ice cream! That instinct to call out the name to anything and everything you see is spot on. Research shows that when a grown-up labels various objects that they see with their child, their child is quite simply more likely to learn the word for that object.

    Play pretend.

    Getting down on the ground and playing with your tyke is always a good thing. And if you and your baby engage in what is called symbolic play, well, that is even better! Symbolic play is when you, say, pretend a banana is a phone, a block is a car, or a cardboard box is a rocket ship. Research has shown that when parents engaged in this type of make-pretend play with their 18- to 24-month-olds, they were more likely to ask questions, which led to way more conversations between the pairs, which (natch), lead to more language growth.

    Embrace two languages.

    If you know more than one language, go ahead and speak them all! Not only will you not confuse your budding linguist, but you will also actually improve your young one’s communication skills. Research in the journal Psychological Science has found that children growing up in multilingual homes are better at accurately deciphering what people are trying to say than children who are exposed to only one language. The kicker? Your child does not have to be bilingual to garner the benefit! It is simply the exposure to more than one language that builds more effective communication skills.

    Wiggle in new words.

    Exercise, it seems, can help to improve a child’s vocabulary, according to a report in the Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research. Here, researchers found that kids aged 6 to 12 who swam after being taught several new words were 13% more accurate in follow up vocabulary tests than kids who coloured. It is thought that moving your body increases levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDFN) which, essentially, is brain fertiliser, helping littles encode new words. To get the most out of post-learning active-time, choose an exercise that your child can do automatically, without much thought or instruction.

    Start counting.

    Learning your 1-2-3s can lead to knowing your A-B-Cs! Three- to 5-year-olds who engage in math activities at home improve their math skills (of course!), and their vocabulary, according to research out of Purdue University. No baby algebra required. Instead, it is all about incorporating math concepts into the everyday, like saying 'here are three apple slices,' counting the stairs as you climb, or asking how many dolls are on the bed. Investigators believe that math-talk spurs dialog between kids and parents that improve oral language skills.

    Embrace some quiet.

    For some, the low hum of the telly forever in the background is like grown-up white noise...but for toddlers, this type of sound is detrimental to language development, according to a study in the Journal of Children and Media. Researchers found that when the telly was on in the background, parents spoke less than when the telly was off. This matters because parents talking is intrinsically linked with child language development.

    Stumped how to keep toddler conversations going? Check out these excellent get-talking tips for ages 12 months to 5 years!

    Descargo de responsabilidad: La información en nuestro sitio NO es un consejo médico para ninguna persona o condición específica. Solo se proporciona como información general. Si tiene alguna pregunta o preocupación médica sobre su hijo o sobre usted mismo, por favor contacte a su proveedor de salud. La leche materna es la mejor fuente de nutrición para los bebés. Es importante que, en preparación para la lactancia y durante la misma, las madres lleven una dieta saludable y equilibrada. La combinación de lactancia materna y alimentación con biberón en las primeras semanas de vida puede reducir la producción de leche materna y es difícil revertir la decisión de no amamantar. Si decide utilizar fórmula infantil, debe seguir las instrucciones cuidadosamente.

    Principales noticias

    El Dr. Harvey Karp utiliza las 5 S para calmar a un bebé quisquilloso

    BEBÉ

    Las 5 S’s para calmar a un bebé

    Un bebé en el Cuarto Trimestre

    BEBÉ

    ¿Qué es el cuarto trimestre?

    Recién nacido durmiendo

    BEBÉ

    Beneficios del ruido blanco para bebés recién nacidos

    A baby with a pacifier

    NIÑO PEQUEÑO

    Cómo y cuándo dejar de usar el chupete

    La madre sostiene al bebé durante la regresión del sueño de 3 a 4 meses

    BEBÉ

    No te dejes sorprender por la regresión del sueño de 3 a 4 meses

    A mother gives her newborn baby a dream feed

    BEBÉ

    ¿Qué es la alimentación onírica?...¿Y cómo la realizo?

    COMPARTIR ESTE ARTÍCULO

    Compartir en FacebookCompartir en TwitterCompartir en LinkedinCompartir en PinterestCompartir por correo electrónicoCopiar enlace al portapapeles

    ELECCIONES DE LOS PADRES

    Más vendidos

    Cuna inteligente SNOO

    SNOO Smart Sleeper Baby Cot

    1395 €

    Slepea envoltura para bebé en 5 segundos arcoíris

    Sleepea® 5-Second Baby Swaddle

    32,95 €

    Saco de dormir SNOO 100% orgánico azul tie-dye

    100% Organic SNOO Sleep Sack

    34,95 €

    SNOObie® Smart Soother

    69,95 €

    SNOObear de color cacao lanoso

    SNOObear® 3-in-1 White Noise Lovey

    54,95 €

    Cuna inteligente SNOO con mosquitera adjunta

    Shoo Mosquito Net

    88 €

    Nubes de Sky Mobile

    Sky Mobile

    89,95 €

    Sábana ajustable para cuna SNOO de algodón 100% orgánico en color azul tie-dye en la caja

    100% Organic Cotton SNOO Baby Cot Fitted Sheet

    19,95 €

    Paquete de 3 sábanas para cuna SNOO en 3 colores diferentes

    SNOO Organic Baby Cot Sheets 3 Pack

    59,85 €

    38,90 €

    Saco de dormir Sleepea® en color rosa

    Sleepea® Comforter Swaddle

    42,95 €

    Saco de dormir SNOO 100% orgánico en color grafito

    100% Organic SNOO Sleep Comforter Sack

    44,95 €

    Paquete de 3 sacos de dormir Sleepea® en color teal planetas

    Sleepea® Swaddle Sack 3 Pack Bundle

    98,85 €

    69,20 €

    Más sobre Toddler

    Toddler pointing at mum's pregnant belly

    TODDLER

    Regresiones en niños pequeños durante el embarazo: qué está pasando… y cómo ayudar

    ¿Tu peque “mayor” de repente actúa como un bebé? Esto es lo que debes saber.

    TODDLER

    Smart Kitchen Safety Tips for Toddlers (and Their Grown-Ups!)

    Keep your curious little cook safe in the kitchen!