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Children – Birth to 2 Years. FACS Standards 4.2.1, 4.2.2 Herr, Judy. Working with Young Children . The Goodheart-Wilcox Co., Inc. 2008. Physical Development. Rapid growth – child’s size, shape, senses, and organs change Gain new abilities Most of 1 st year spent coordinating motor skills
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Children – Birth to 2 Years FACS Standards 4.2.1, 4.2.2 Herr, Judy. Working with Young Children. The Goodheart-Wilcox Co., Inc. 2008.
Physical Development • Rapid growth – child’s size, shape, senses, and organs change • Gain new abilities • Most of 1st year spent coordinating motor skills • Through repetition, physical strength and motor coordination gained
As children grow, activities, diets, sleep schedules, and safety policies must be adjusted • Infant seat – okay during early infancy, but by end of 1st year, child needs room for large muscles to develop and need time and space for crawling and walking
Size and Shape • Weight may change daily • Average birth weight 7 ½ pounds • 5 months later, double birth weight • By age 1, triples birth weight • By age 2, four time birth weight
Length also changes rapidly • Average birth length 20 inches • By age 1, usually grown 10-12 inches • By age 2, grow 2-6 inches more – 32-36 inches
Differences in sexes – males slightly heavier and taller • Most boys reach ½ adult height by age 2
Reflexes • Automatic body response to a stimulus • Some last a lifetime; others disappear after a few months • Doctors check reflexes for brain and nerve development
Types of Reflexes • Survival – necessary for life – breathing, sucking, swallowing • Primitive – disappear with age – Babinski, Moro, Palmar, stepping
Sucking Reflex • Helps infant obtain food for survival • Permanent reflex • Course of development – birth to 6 months
Rooting Reflex • Causes infants to turn heads toward anything that brushes their face • Helps them find food source • Helps child find something to suck • Usually disappears by 3-4 months
Moro Reflex • “Startle” reflex • Occurs when infant startled by noise or sudden movement • Flinging arms and legs outward and extending head; then quickly draws arms together, crying loudly • Peaks during 1st month and usually disappears by 6 months
Palmar Grasp Reflex • When you touch an infant’s palm, hand will grip tightly • Tightly enough to lift infant into a sitting position – Don’t! • Infant has no control over this response
Can be seen with rattle or any other object placed in palm • Weakens after 3-4 months • Disappears totally later in 1st year
Babinski Reflex • Present at birth of full term babies • Stroke sole of foot on outside of heel to toe • Toes will fan out; foot twitches • Usually lasts for much of 1st year
Stepping/Walking Reflex • Observed in full term babies • When infants feet are placed on flat surface, infant will lift one foot after another in stepping motion • Usually disappears 2-3 months after birth • Will learn to step voluntarily late in 1st year
Motor Sequence • Order in which child performs new movements • Each new movement builds on previous ones • Sequence depends on brain and nerve development • Movements develop in areas closest to brain and spinal cord first
First months after birth, head and trunk control develops – can lift head; watch an moving object by moving head side to side • 4-6 months of age, roll over; first turn from stomach to back; then able to roll back to stomach
Can sit upright 4-6 months - need to strengthen neck and back muscles • Gradually able to pull themselves into sitting position • Then, crawl – can be done after learn to roll onto stomach – pulls with arms and wiggles stomach; some push with legs
Crawling versus Creeping • Crawling – abdomen on floor • Creeping – movement in which child supports weight on their arms and legs; then move forward
As arms and legs strengthen, able to stand with help from adult • Soon able to stand while using furniture to support themselves • Hitching – must be able to sit alone first; move arms and legs, sliding their buttocks across the floor
With better coordination and leg strength, can walk when led by adult • Pull selves up to standing position • Stand without support • True toddler next – walk alone
Hand movements • Earliest are reflexes • By 3-4 months, enjoy swiping at things - unable to grasp • By 9 months, eye-hand coordination improved enough they can pick up objects • By 16 months, can scribble with crayons
By age 2, can draw simple figure of vertical and horizontal lines • By age 2 show preference for one hand over the other; some children don’t show hand preference until age 4
Cognitive Development 1st 2 years • Reflexes to coordinated movements • Two main forces are work: • Heredity- determines when brain and senses will mature enough to learn certain skills • Environment – opportunities to use senses and try new things
Being able to see, hear, feel, taste, and smell important to learning • Senses develop in 1st 2 years of life • Sight and hearing develop quickly
Birth to 3 months • Vision blurry at birth • Near vision better than far • Like to see things 8-15 inches on front of them • As vision improves show preference for certain objects
Will gaze longer at patterned – checks and stripes – than a solid color • Prefer bold over pastel colors • Pay more attention to faces rather than objects • Gaze longer at a smiling face than one with no expression
1 month – focus on hairline • 2 months – eyes • 3 months – facial expressions
Hearing • As infant turn head toward noises – startled by loud noises • React to noises by crying • Lulled to sleep by rhythmic sounds – lullaby or heartbeat
React to human voice while ignoring other sounds • By 3 weeks can distinguish between mother and father and other stranger
During 1st 3 months, infants don’t distinguish difference between themselves and their environment • Don’t recognize that their moving hand is THEIR hand • Could be someone else’s
3-6 months • Focus on their surroundings • By 6 months, distinguish between familiar and unfamiliar faces • Learn to touch, shake, and hit objects they see
Memory, foresight, and self-awareness developing • Hitting crib gym – makes noise • Moving – makes noise
3-6 months – show judgment- prefer smell and voice of parent over a stranger • From birth, infants make noise • During this stage, vocalization increases • When you hold and play with infants, they make noises
Respond new ways to touch • Respond happily to light touches and tickling • Take an object, look at it, mouth it, and shake it, bang it on floor
Body awareness begins to develop • May bite toes; when teeth begin coming in, child will experience pain when biting toes
6-9 months • Object permanence comprehension begins – understanding that object remains whether within sight or not • Developing memory and goal-oriented thinking
9-12 months • Become intentional about goals • Have definite ideas about wants • Anticipate certain events
12-18 months • Like pat-a-cake and peek-a-boo • Trial-and-error problem solving • Experiment with objects to find new uses • Cause and effect fascinates children
Language – change of behavior occurring as a result of experience and maturation; relates to environment • Becomes bigger part of communication • 1 or 2 words to communicate, but don’t understand combining a series of words to form sentences
Books become important at this time • Love to sit in lap and listen to story • Can identify pictures, pointing to them, giving them names • Understand more than they can say
18-24 months • Able to apply what known about objects to solve problemswithout as much trial-and-error • Think in terms of actions • Improved thinking and motor skills makes caring for toddlers exhausting
Want to actively explore, find out as much as possible about new places and objects • Don’t understand dangers, therefore, caregivers must make environment as safe as possible • Pretend starts, a form of deferred imitation
Deferred imitation – watching another person’s behavior, then acting that behavior out later • Understand that symbols represent other real objects • Learning more and more words • At first, learn 1 or 2 words each month
Between 18-24 months, 10-20 new words added each month • When vocabulary reaches 200 words, they begin to combine 2 words – known as telegraphic speech
Social-Emotional Development first 2 years • At birth don’t show a wide variety of emotions – either comfortable or uncomfortable – express this using movements, facial expressions, and sounds • Cooing – comfort or delight • Crying - discomfort
A range of emotions in first months – shown by facial expressions • Between 6-9 months will show fear, anxiety, and anger • Socially young children focus on a few adults • After age 1, take interest in other toddlers, but adults still most important
Temperament • Quality and intensity of emotional reactions • Passivity, irritability, and activity patterns part of temperament
Passivity – how actively child is involved in surroundings • Passive infant withdraws from a new person or event • Active infant responds to a new person or event