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Busy parents can now enjoy focused time with their children. Wiggle Giggle Learn offers easy to use activity plans individualized to your child’s age in months ensuring educational success, happiness and strong family relationships with only 15 minutes required per day.

Our Play2Learn program is like a dream come true for many parents that struggle to find time in the day to be present with their children. Parents can now lose the guilt of not doing enough or knowing enough about what they should be doing with babies, toddlers and preschoolers. Parenting is a joy and we want to help you make every day your child’s favorite day with you!

For more information about Wiggle Giggle Learn, visit us at www.wigglegigglelearn.com

You may also be interested in reading Tracey’s award-winning blog titled EARLY EDUCATION IS THE KEY!

2 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Amanda  |  July 14, 2008 at 1:46 am

    Hi, my name is Amanda and my nephew was born 10 1/2 weeks early. He is VERY smart and has caught up very quickly, but cannot say some of his letters, especially ‘M’. I didn’t know if anyone knew of any techniques to teach certain letters to a premature two-year-old? Any help would be great!

    Thank You!
    Amanda

    Reply
  • 2. wigglegigglelearn  |  July 14, 2008 at 2:15 am

    Maybe this information will help you.

    Even though your child may have some sound errors, these errors are considered “developmental” if the child is below the age of mastery. Research shows, that until that age, the child could acquire and use the sound independent of therapy. Speech pathologists try to identify children whose speech cannot be understood much of the time, have multiple errors, have severe production errors such as a lateral lisp, or who continue to have errors in sounds or patterns beyond the age of mastery.

    Be careful not to pressure him into making sounds he isn’t developmentally ready for… this is exactly the reason children stutter. Be a good model for the sound and repeat words to him that have that sound often.

    I have created a new page at the top of the blog. This page contains a chart that compares boys to girls when it comes to mastery of speech sounds. Check it out!

    Tracey Bryant Stuckey
    Chief Creative Learning Officer
    Wiggle Giggle Learn

    Reply

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