Active baby, healthy brain 135 fun exercises and activities to maximize your child's brain development from birth through age 5 1/2

Margaret Sassé

Book - 2010

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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 649.122/Sasse Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : The Experiment c2010.
Language
English
Main Author
Margaret Sassé (-)
Other Authors
Georges McKail (-)
Physical Description
160 p. : ill. ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781615190065
  • Foreword
  • Terms used in this book
  • Preface
  • Nutrition
  • Stage A. Birth to 6 months
  • Basic activities
  • Helping your infant's development
  • Inhibition of the primitive reflexes
  • Massage, massage, massage ...
  • ... and more massage
  • General infant activities
  • Infant exercises
  • Vestibular stimulation
  • Floor playtime
  • Tummy time is vital
  • Brain stimulation: dancing
  • Music for all ages
  • Exercises: 2-6 months
  • Exercises for hips and limbs
  • Vestibular fun
  • More vestibular fun
  • Nursery rhymes, rhythm, and song
  • Vision: Birth to 2 months
  • Vision: 2-6 months
  • Forward movement: 3-6 months
  • Muscle tone development
  • Legs, feet, and hands stimulation
  • Movement stimulation
  • Vestibular stimulation
  • Stage B. 6-12 months
  • Creeping, cruising, walking
  • Massage
  • Massage, exercises, music
  • Tummy time
  • Crawling on the front
  • Bottom shufflers
  • Shoulders, arms, and hands development
  • Balance through muscle tone stimulation
  • Creeping activities
  • Ladders
  • Cruising, bobbing, and thinking
  • Exercises: 10-12 months
  • Dancing
  • Rocking, swinging, and jiggling
  • Visualization
  • Stage C. Walking to 18 months
  • Massage, music, and songs
  • Basic motor planning: 12-15 months
  • Balance: 15-18 months
  • Developmental activities: 15-18 months
  • Upper body development: 15-18 months
  • Vestibular stimulation
  • Rolling and tipping backward
  • Rockin' and rollin'
  • Music, rhythm, and song
  • Dance exercises
  • Vision
  • Visualization
  • Stage D. 18-24 months
  • Massage
  • Massage through exercise and song
  • Exercise to music
  • Nursery rhyme movements
  • Muscle tone development
  • Upper body development
  • Animal locomotion
  • Vestibular bending and spinning
  • Wheelbarrows, swinging, and spinning
  • Balance
  • Further Balance
  • Rhythm band
  • Motor planning through dance
  • Sensory motor perceptual activities
  • Beanbags and balloons
  • Balls
  • Hoops
  • Ribbons and cords
  • Visual tracking
  • Visualization
  • Stage E. 2-2½ years
  • Massage in crocodile position
  • Angels in the sand
  • Body awareness and vestibular stimulation
  • Rolling and tumbling
  • Swinging and spinning
  • Wobble board and balance beam
  • Motor planning: dance
  • Music, rhythm, nursery rhymes, and songs
  • Rhythm sticks
  • Beanbags
  • Balls
  • Hoops
  • Ribbons and cords
  • Vision
  • Visualization
  • Stage F. 2½-3½ years
  • Massage in crocodile position
  • Tiger creeping
  • Finger awareness
  • Mini-trampoline exercises
  • Body awareness and concepts
  • Spinning and swinging
  • Animal balance positions
  • Wobble board
  • Laterality for 3-year-olds
  • Cross-pattern movements
  • Music, dance, and rhythm
  • Rhythm sticks
  • Beanbags
  • Balls
  • Hoops
  • Ribbons and cords
  • Visual stimulation
  • Visualization
  • Stage G. 3½-4½ years
  • Massage and cross-pattern commando
  • Angels in the sand
  • Balance
  • Scooter boards
  • Mini-trampoline
  • Laterality
  • Dance
  • Rhythm sticks for 3-year-olds
  • Rhythm sticks for 4-year-olds
  • Beanbags
  • Balls
  • Hoops
  • Ropes and cords
  • Vision
  • Visualization
  • Stage H. 4½-5½ years
  • Massage: crocodile and commando positions
  • Squirming, crawling, and creeping
  • Tumbling, rocking, swinging
  • Balance
  • Mini-trampoline
  • Cross-pattern actions
  • Aerobic dance
  • Rest period with Mozart
  • Homemade band
  • Rhythm sticks
  • Beanbags
  • Balls
  • Hoops
  • Ropes and cords
  • Vision
  • Visualization
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Sasse, founder of Australia-based Toddler Kindy GymbaROO, offers a practical handbook for parents hoping to boost their baby's intellectual and physical development. The author, who died last year at the age of 80, divides her program into eight sections ranging from newborn to age five-and-a-half. In each, she offers specific, age-appropriate exercises and activities, accompanied by illustrations: each exercise takes only two minutes or less, totaling about 10 minutes per day. Along with instructions, the author provides the rationale behind each activity; for instance, in a section titled "vestibular fun," she asserts that rocking chairs and swinging cradles not only lull an infant to sleep but also provide sensory stimulation, contributing to the accelerated development of motor skills. Sasse explains why "tummy time" is essential to building pathways in the baby's brain, and encourages the use of dance and music for stimulating nerve endings in the inner ear. For toddlers and older children, the author offers interactive activities that employ the use of beanbags, hoops, balls and other resources. Sasse's focus is on fun, but she also provides parents with an informative manual that outlines the crucial connections between movement and the health and development of body and brain. (Jan.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Any time this columnist sees something about "maximizing brain development," a warning light goes off in her head. Like other paranoia-inducing texts, this book by late child development expert Sasse takes a normal, innate response like movement (just try to hold a baby and not rock) and says it's imperative to "overcom[e] primitive reflexes" and increase "vestibular stimulation." Whoa! Did you know motherhood required a Ph.D.? Get this: "To help your infant stimulate his eyes, show him flickering. Christmas tree lights, for a few minutes, four times a day." Approaching infancy like a recipe that will be spoiled should one misstep occur is not helpful or advisable. Too bad; the drawings are cute.-Julianne J. Smith, Ypsilanti Dist. Lib., MI (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.