Teach your baby to read
Did you ever realize that it is your baby and not your older child who can learn to read the fastest? Absurd as it may sound, but a baby aged a few months or even less than three years would handsomely beat his/her five year old counterpart in learning to read. Babies are the best learners of languages and processes; so it is not only reading but also learning multiple languages that they can muster at their tender age.
What is the reason that babies are such fast learners? It is that the babies have developing brains. The cognitive capabilities of the baby develop along with the brain. The developing cognitive powers are better simulated with intellectual exercise. Learning to read at an early age provides this much-desired simulation. The benefit is two-folded – the brain of the baby gets an exercise conducive of development, and the baby incurs the knowledge required to read in the process.
Scientists claim that the brains of babies can be impacted intellectually and emotionally right from the period that they are inside the womb. Studies suggest that babies who are taught to read at an early age gain significant advantages over children who learn reading more conventionally later. It has been observed that babies who learn to read at an early age perform better at school since one of the biggest challenges – learning to read – is no longer a challenge for them. As a result, they enjoy school more and eventually grow up as better intellectuals compared to the ones who learn studying at a more conventional age. Thus the cascading effect of learning to read early is remarkable. It leaves a big positive impact for the entire life of the baby.
Scientific research has further shown that as the baby starts entering childhood and crosses the age of three years, the prospect of teaching the child to read naturally gradually starts to wane. As time moves forward, it gradually keeps becoming more and more difficult for the child to learn such critical soft skills. The same amount of learning that would have been easy for the child now needs more serious attention to overcome.
All this suggests that starting to teach your baby to read at an early tender age is the best option. In fact, it has been observed that once the baby crosses the age of three months, the vision of the baby matures. The baby reacts differently to different objects shown after this stage. Once this happens, the baby is ready to learn to read and you should be ready to start teaching your baby to read at this stage. The baby may not speak at this age, but he/she is all set to start learning the essence of reading.
How to teach your baby to read? It is always suggested to start teaching with colored cards. The benefit of such a beginning is two-fold. The baby would be required to remember only some simpler elements to begin with, and that would be easier. It would also be more fun for the baby to understand and express such symbols than expressing conventional letters and words. The ease of understanding and the fun of learning the process would combine to make it more interesting for the baby. If you implement it the right way, then the baby will start looking forward to the learning session rather than resisting those. It is the self-interest and curiosity of the baby that will drive the process once the baby starts catching up. Once it happens, the task becomes much simpler for you. All you have to do is follow it up with the baby with the right discipline and tactic, and you shall quickly reach your goal of teaching your baby to read.
The modern teach-baby-to-read programs would assist you to catch up with the latest methods to teach your baby to read. State-of-the-art technology also has been developed to assist the process. As you move ahead with the process, you shall find your baby to read faster, and will keep increasing the size of vocabulary. Keep asking interesting questions as applicable. If the baby is too young to speak then he/she may express and answer with gestures. Overall, you and your baby will be the part of an exciting beginning of the journey of your baby to education.



Very interesting article, are there any other types of resources that you would be able to recommend to help new born? Is it even applicable?