Benefits of Baby GamesBy Kathryn Russell Selk
Her chubby little hands hold the towel slightly above her head while I pretend I can’t find her. With a giggle, she pulls the towel down, showing me her grin. She’s so excited she can’t stop bouncing her butt up and down, and I can’t stop smiling. Sixty seconds later, we do it all over again.
Peekaboo, or something similar, is a staple of most baby-rearing routines. But why are such games so fun and satisfying, both for our babies and for us? Is it just the game, or is something deeper going on?
Serious Fun
Most experts agree that for babies, almost everything you do with them—including playing games—can help them learn and reinforce new skills. Playing “swat the dangling toy” with a 3-month-old, for example, helps hand-eye coordination, fine motor skills and visual development. Chasing a 6-month-old in a game of “I’m gonna get you!” helps with social development, balance and gross motor skills.
Patricia Nan Anderson, an expert in child development and author of Parenting: A Field Guide, says baby games offer a predictable “script,” in which parent and child each have a clear role. Even more, Anderson says, games help your baby communicate, even if she can’t talk yet.
“It’s like a conversation,” Anderson says. This is in contrast to the rest of a baby’s life, in which the parent is usually in control. Your baby feels both a sense of unusual equality with you and a sense of accomplishment when the “script” is successful.
Skill building aside, baby games are serious fun! Here are some of the most popular baby games, plus ideas for variations:
Peekaboo
Your baby won’t start learning the concept of object permanence (the idea that something does not stop existing just because she can’t see it) until about 6 to 9 months, but you can still have fun playing peekaboo before that age. Try drawing a face on a piece of paper and hiding behind it. For an older child, try hiding behind a cushion and letting your child pull the cushion away. Crawlers will have fun if you play peekaboo with a toy, hiding it behind you or under a nearby blanket. For toddlers, hide-and-seek with a toy is a variation that allows you to head out on a mission together!
Mirror, Mirror
Most babies don’t recognize themselves in a mirror until they are about 15 months old, but even babies as young as a few months can enjoy the experience of seeing a human face. Experts say mirror play helps emotional, social and visual development. Try saying, “Who is that?” and pointing at the baby and her image. When your baby is 3 to 6 months old, get a child-safe mirror or a “tummy time” mat with a reflective surface, and you’ll also boost her motor development. Older children love looking at themselves in the mirror, especially if you point at and touch parts of them, saying something like, “Whose nose is that? It’s baby’s nose!” Toddlers can practice their mad, sad, scary, happy and other “feelings” faces in front of a mirror.
3,2,1-Contact!
Babies are incredibly interested in touch, even at birth. Touching is not just soothing—it helps with body awareness, emotional and social development, and tactile stimulation. When your baby is a newborn, try stroking his tummy with things with different textures, such as a piece of flannel, a warm, damp towel, a feather, or a soft sweater. When he gets older, try sewing some of those textures onto a glove, securely, and letting him explore them on your hand, then show him your other, ungloved hand. Babies 9 to 12 months old will enjoy pulling pieces with different textures, shapes and weights out of an old shoebox—just make sure to stay with them, since everything will (of course) end up in their mouths. Toddlers will enjoy gluing different textures to a big piece of paper or stiff board in the shape of a spaceship, person or other interesting figure. With older children, try using a blindfold and asking them to identify the items by touch alone.
Jammin’
Sound and rhythm help little ones build listening skills, learn to visually track objects (as they follow the item making sound), understand cause-and-effect, increase hand-eye coordination, and develop social skills. For a newborn, try stringing together some lightweight rattles, jar lids or similar items on a ribbon—securely—and dangle it over your baby. When your baby is 3 to 6 months, let him sit in your lap and swat at the string, making the sound himself. At 6 to 9 months, get out the wooden spoons and pots (and a set of earplugs for yourself). Older kids will love putting on a concert for you with a homemade drum or other instrument. (Check local thrift stores for a used xylophone or ukulele). And, of course, from birth until your child is old enough to say, “You’re embarrassing me, Mom,” you should sing any silly song you like, anytime you like, whether you make it all up or just go with an old standby like “Old MacDonald.”
When she’s not working or writing, Kathryn Russell Selk embarrasses her 7-year-old, Kiernan, and her husband, Christian, by making up really goofy songs and games for their 2-year-old, Kallison.
| Advertise | Find Us | Writers' Guide | Subscribe | About Us | Contact Us | Calendar Links |
Sacramento Parent is published by Family Publishing Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Reproduction without expressed written consent is prohibited. 2010