Babies should be allowed to play with their own toys and put them back in their original positions. To accomplish this task, parents need to use the correct language to prompt, such as "remember that the home of the small animals in the zoo is at the bottom of the closet near the door". Babies can only learn these words when they hear standardized and detailed descriptions.
You can play a game with your baby called "I am a scout". This game requires the baby to be familiar with the positions and names of the surrounding objects.
Step 2: hide and seek
Consciously create "equipment" that children can hide in, such as big boxes that children can get into.
When you walk around and beat them, you should have a "live report" of where you went, including of course where you found them.
3. Build a "highway"
Find an open space and build a road with the baby between several points, such as building a road between the puppet house, garage and supermarket. They can use wood blocks or plastic as paving materials.
Ask the baby to describe the route the puppet needs to take from one place to another.
Add some parking places, such as traffic lights or zebra crossings, to increase the baby's vocabulary and make the task more complicated. Use some short sentences, such as "crossing the road at the zebra crossing" and "turning left at the traffic light". In order to diversify tasks, you can ask your baby to describe different routes when using different means of transportation.
Step 4 describe the layout of the room
Babies can learn a lot about orientation by drawing maps.
On a big piece of paper, let the baby draw the walls of the room and mark the positions of the windows and doors.
Let the baby cut out different colors and shapes of pasted pieces of paper to represent different areas of the room, such as the reading corner frame, and paste these small pieces of paper on the big paper. Encourage him to make more accurate indoor maps. This will be a good start for the baby to understand the process of drawing an area.
Then the baby can introduce the interior furnishings of his small bedroom in a similar way.
Step 5 draw a map
Telling stories inspires babies to draw maps and read stories, such as A Little gingerbread man. His life began with a frying pan in an old woman's attic. He jumped from the frying pan to the floor, slipped out of the kitchen, ran out of the door, and then ran along the path. He walked through the garden and saw a gardener working. Then he ran to the field and saw a cow and a horse. Because all the animals and people were chasing him, he jumped into a deep river and a fox saved him.
When you tell stories, encourage your baby to participate in your stories. You can keep repeating this famous dialogue: "run, run, run as hard as you can, but you can't catch me." I am little gingerbread man. "
Let the baby draw a picture to show the sequence of events. When he describes the place where each event happened, you should emphasize the correct vocabulary.