Enhance Your Infant's Learning Curve
Watch your toddler's curiosity thrive at St Clair Academy. The program caters to children between 6 weeks and 2 years old. With an adult to infant ratio of 1:5, our teachers can center their attention on each child. Give your kid the right start with our infant care program.
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Promoting Cognitive Development
Our curriculum provides a comprehensive learning experience with nurturing care. Watch your kid respond and adapt to their surrounding using all their senses. We help them get engaged in activities that make them aware of their environment and make associations with different sounds and sights.
We focus on object performance, creating sensory memories, and comprehending similarity, through games, toys, and puzzles. The learning doesn't stop there. Once your child is at home, you can carry these activities out with them again.
Developing Language and Communication
It's important that your child learns how to express. Our teachers will constantly communicate with your child and promote verbal and nonverbal communication.
We engage infants in activities that help them make associations between words and colors, interpret sign language, respond and imitate sounds with rhymes and songs, and recognize facial expressions. You can continue these activities at home too by practicing simple sign languages, help them identify expressions in front of the mirror, and read books.
Aid Social and Emotional Growth
We expose your child to familiar faces to help build trust and encourage cooperation. Having a dedicated teacher enables your infant to grow up in a nurturing environment. Ensure that you further this by encouraging your infant to interact with family members, playing games of self-awareness, and reciting poems with social gestures.
Development of Motor Skills
We make sure that all infants begin exploring their motor skills. Learning to hold a pencil, crawling, sitting up, turning their heads, and other actions are an important part of growing. We help them learn how to hold their bottles and focus on walking or drawing during playtime to get them in touch with their motor skills.
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