As parents, it is important to be aware of your baby’s physical growth and acquired skills, so that you can provide activities and a safe environment for your baby’s brain development.
Growth and development within the first year of life is very rapid. Besides physical growth, your baby is learning all sorts of new skills during this stage. As parents, it is important that you are aware of these changes or acquired skills so that you can provide activities and a safe environment for your baby’s brain development.
Growing Baby
Knowing the stages of development of your baby will help you react and respond in the right way, so as to help hone your child’s development and skills.
An environment that encourages your child to explore things around him is important in his physical development. Be sure to allow your baby plenty of space for rolling and, eventually, crawling. Babies love to look at moving objects and try to reach for them, so be sure to hang mobiles and streamers safely in their space. Also, provide rattles and small toys that are easy to reach for and pick up, as babies like to experiment with objects. Make it a habit to disinfect the toys your baby puts in his mouth on a daily basis.
It’s crucial to develop your baby’s senses like sight, touch, hearing, smell and taste as he learns to discover his surroundings. Encourage your child to make comparisons by feeling and looking at them.
What to Expect
These developmental milestones are just a guide. Each baby is unique and his development may vary from others. So do not worry if your baby differs by a few months. What is important is that these milestones occur in a particular order. If you are concerned about the development of your child, talk about it with your child’s doctor.
0 to 3 months | Most movements, which your newborn makes, are controlled by his reflexes. These include sucking, swallowing and grasping reflexes. Voluntary movements will start to appear when your baby is a few weeks old.The body structure of a newborn is different from an older child or an adult. His head equals about one-quarter of his total body size. His body trunk is long and his legs are short.At 2 months of age, your baby should be able to hold a rattle for a short time and glance from one object to another.By the end of three months, your baby should be able to lift his head off the floor when laid flat on his tummy. |
4 to 6 months | Your baby should double his birth weight by 4 to 5 months of age.Around 4 months, he will roll over from tummy to back and shortly after that from back to tummy. Also, he will push his chest off the floor when laid on his tummy.He will reach for objects and shake a toy or rattle, hold two toys at once and put them in his mouth.By the end of 6 months, he may even start to sit without support.Solid foods should be introduced sometime between 4 and 6 months. |
7 to 9 months | Your baby will begin to push himself up onto his hands and knees.Soon after pushing up he will begin to crawl.Your baby will start to follow your movements around the room.He will begin to use a pincer grasp, which is using his forefinger and thumb, to pick up small objects.By the end of 9 months, he goes from tummy to sitting position by himself. |
10 to 12 months | At around 10 months, your baby will stand with support holding onto furniture. He will also begin to walk along furniture, which is called cruising. Also, he will start to stand on his own.At around 12 months, he will take his first steps.By this time he will display a hand preference, so you may be able to tell if he will be right- or left-handed.He can push a car along on the floor and put objects into a large container. |
13 to 18 months | By the end of 14 months, your child should be able to walk on his own. He has now moved from the stage of infancy to toddlerhood.He is able to scribble on a piece of paper with a crayon.Your toddler can also stack a tower with toy blocks.He should be able to turn the pages in a book. |
17 to 24 months | He can now draw an arc with a pencil on a piece of paper after being shown how.He can turn a doorknob using both hands.Your toddler can zip and unzip a large zipper. |