Developmental Milestones[1]
| Age |
Motor |
Speech |
Vision and hearing |
Social development |
| 4-6 weeks |
|
|
|
Smiles at parent |
| 6-8 weeks |
|
Vocalises |
|
|
| 3 months |
Prone:head held up for prolonged periods. No grasp reflex |
Makes vowel noises |
Follows dangling toy from side to side. Turns head round to sound |
Squeals with pleasure appropriately. Discriminates smile |
| 5 months |
Holds head steady. Goes for objects and gets them. Objects taken to mouth |
Enjoys vocal play |
|
Smiles at mirror image |
| 6 months |
Transfers objects from one hand to the other. Pulls self up to sit and sits erect with supports. Rolls over prone to supine. Palmer grasp of cube |
Double syllable sounds such as 'mumum' and 'dada' |
Localises sound 45cm lateral to either ear |
May show 'stranger shyness' |
| 9-10 months |
Wiggles and crawls. Sits unsupported. Picks up objects with pincer grasp |
Babbles tunefully |
Looks for toys dropped |
Apprehensive about strangers |
| 1 year |
Stands holding furniture. Stands alone for a second or two, then collapses with a bump |
Babbles 2 or 3 words repeatedly |
Drops toys, and watches where they go |
Cooperates with dressing, waves goodbye, understands simple commands |
| 18 months |
Can walk alone. Picks up toy without falling over. Gets up/down stairs holding onto rail. Begins to jump with both feet. Can build a tower of 3 or 4 cubes and throw a ball |
'Jargon'. Many intelligible words |
|
Demands constant mothering. Drinks from a cup with both hands. Feeds self with a spoon |
| 2 years |
Able to run. Walks up and down stairs 2 feet per step. Builds tower of 6 cubes |
Joins 2-3 words in sentences |
|
Parallel play. Dry by day |
| 3 years |
Goes up stairs 1 foot per step and downstairs 2 feet per step. Copies circle, imitates cross and draws man on request. Builds tower of 9 cubes |
Constantly asks questions. Speaks in sentences |
|
Cooperative play. Undresses with assistance. Imaginary companions |
| 4 years |
Goes down stairs one foot per step, skips on one foot. Imitates gate with cubes, copies a cross |
Questioning at its height. Many infantile substitutions in speech |
|
Dresses and undresses with assistance. Attends to own toilet needs |
| 5 years |
Skips on both feet and hops. Draws a man and copies a triangle. Gives age |
Fluent speech with few infantile substitutions in speech |
|
Dresses and undresses alone |
| 6 years |
Copies a diamond. Knows right from left and number of fingers |
Fluent speech |
|
|
Creative development could very well be seen as how the child learns in its environment through experimenting in different ways of doing everything.
Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt (will)
(J. Chasse, 2008) Psychosocial stimulation is vital during the toddler years. Play begins to become interactive. Toddlers begin to learn and exhibit independence, but ironically they enjoy sharing this discovery with others. Another important advancement is active social play with adults including mirroring and repeating. Songs, rhymes, and finger plays (eg. itsy bitsy spider, little teapot, etc.) are a great way to encourage and stimulate this area of development.
Initiative Vs. Guilt. During this third stage, the "play age," or the later preschool years (from about 3½ to, in the United States culture, entry into formal school). During it, the healthily developing child learns: (1) to imagine, to broaden his skills through active play of all sorts, including fantasy (2) to cooperate with others (3) to lead as well as to follow. Immobilized by guilt, he is: (1) fearful (2) hangs on the fringes of groups (3) continues to depend unduly on adults and (4) is restricted both in the development of play skills and in imagination.