Infancy Introduction
This topic center covers parenting and child development of infant children (ages 0-2). For a complete review of the theories of child development upon which this article is based, please visit our Child and Adolescent Development topic center. For coverage of child development and parenting topics applicable to preschool children (early childhood aged 3 to 7 please visit our Early Childhood Parenting and Child Development topic center. For information on parenting and child development of middle childhood children (ages 8 to 11), please visit our Middle Childhood Parenting and Development center and Child Development Theory: Middle Childhood center. For information on parenting adolescents (ages 12-24), please visit our Adolescence Child Development and Parenting and Child Development Theory: Adolescence topic center.
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Fast Facts: Learn! Fast!
What physical development takes place in infants?
- Physical development occurs in several important ways, including children growing in size and weight, but also becoming better able to move themselves around and to manipulate objects, and having senses that become more refined over time.
- Babies can feel and respond to pain and touch from birth, and this is an important first connection between infants and caregivers.
- Babies can hear at birth, and doctors can test infants for hearing problems right after birth. As infants grow, their mental ability to process and use information they hear improves.
- Unlike their abilities to smell or hear, babies are not able to see as well as adults do. However by age 2-3 months they have the ability to see a full range of colors and can focus on objects just like adults.
- Infants need to learn how to move and to use their bodies to perform various tasks, a process better known as motor development.
- One way babies learn to use their bodies is by learning to achieve large physical tasks, or gross motor skills, such as crawling and walking.
- Fine motor skills develop alongside gross motor skills. Beyond just learning how to use and manipulate their bodies in large movements, babies are learning how to use their hands and how to coordinate smaller movements with their senses, such as sight.
- Babies grow at an amazing rate in the first months and years of life as they rapidly reproduce cells and grow in length and weight.
- In the first 2 years, babies grow to almost half their adult height and can quadruple their birth weight, and their bodily proportions also change.
What cognitive development takes place in infants?
- Babies are not only growing physically during the first 2 years of life, but also cognitively (mentally).
- Every day while they interact with and learn about their environment they are creating new connections and pathways between nerve cells both within their brains, and between their brains and bodies.
- A major development during this period (usually around 8-12 months) is that of object permanence, the understanding that something still exists even if it can't be seen.
- As infants' brains continue to develop, infants also develop the ability to communicate; to comprehend and produce spoken language.
- Babies learn language by taking in information through their senses of hearing and sight as they learn to process the meanings behind those sights and sounds.
- Babies' and young children's language development is strongly influenced by the language they hear spoken around them and to them.
- Research has shown that young children are better able to learn multiple languages or languages other than their family's primary language because their growing brains enable them to learn a wide variety of meanings, words, and language structures.
What emotional/social development takes place in infants?
- Babies can feel interest, distress, disgust, and happiness from birth, and can communicate these through facial expressions and body posture.
- Infants begin showing a spontaneous "social smile" around age 2 to 3 months, and begin to laugh spontaneously around age 4 months.
- Between ages 2 and 6 months, infants express other feelings such as anger, sadness, surprise, and fear.
- Between ages 5 and 6 months, babies begin to exhibit stranger anxiety where they do not like it when other people hold or play with them, and will show this discomfort visibly.
- Around age 12 months, babies become aware of not only other peoples' expressions but also their actual emotional states, especially distress.
- Between the ages of 13 and 18 months, separation anxiety may subside as object permanence develops, and they understand their caretaker isn't gone even when they can't see them.
- By age 2, toddlers can show a wide range of emotions and are becoming better at regulating and coping with their emotions.
- Another important aspect of emotional development, temperament, has to do with babies' general emotional and social state.
- Temperament refers to babies' innate personality; the general pattern of how babies will react to and interact with their environment which is present from birth.
- Closely related to infants' emotional development is their social development; it's through relationships with caregivers and other people that children learn how to apply and use their emotions, expressions, and emotional understanding.
What sexuality and body awareness takes place in infants?
- While many people believe that sexual development does not become an important issue until puberty and adolescence, children actually begin showing sexual behavior and interest in their sexual functioning from infancy.
- Babies are continually exploring their own bodies in order to learn about them.
- They want to understand what they look like and how parts work and this will include investigating their genitals or walking around naked.
- Because such behavior is a normal and natural development of their sexual, gender, and personal identity, caregivers should avoid chastising young children or labeling these kinds of exploratory actions as "bad" or "dirty."
- Instead, caregivers should set and enforce proper limits on such behavior, allowing toddlers and young children to explore themselves at home in private and discouraging them from doing these behaviors in public.
- Distracting children, and guiding them towards more socially appropriate behavior are good ways to get children to refocus without shaming them in the process.
How can I successfully parent my infant?
- Coming home from the hospital for the first time with a tiny person who depends entirely on you for all his needs can be a daunting prospect and it's normal to feel a mixture of excitement, joy, and love along with some anxiety, fear, and a little trepidation.
- It's important to support the baby\'s head and neck in order to stabilize the entire body, and holding infants securely also communicates unconditional love that helps to form the parent-child bond.
- Parents and caregivers should facilitate movement and growth by giving babies safe environments to play and to explore on their own.
- Infants need food and water to survive, to grow, and to thrive.
- Babies take in nutrients and fluids, and their bodies break them down, keep what they need, and get rid of the waste products through urination and fecal elimination. Preparation is the key to smooth diaper changes for everyone involved.
- Caregivers can help their baby learn how to sleep in more adult-like patterns and how to soothe themselves to sleep. While some babies easily adapt to more mature sleep cycles, other babies may take much more effort and patience to do so.
- Babies need to be bathed regularly and there are different ways to wash babies, according to their age, motor abilities, and preferences.
- Babies cry because they're hungry, tired, sick, hot, cold, in pain, bored, over stimulated, want affection, or are uncomfortable in some way and parents can often learn to differentiate their baby's cries.
- At a normal well-baby visit, parents should expect doctors to measure and weigh the baby and to discuss the baby's feeding and elimination, sleep habits, growth, development, and general well-being.
- Another important factor in maintaining infant health is building up their immune system, or their ability to fight off serious infections, through immunizations.
- Common baby medical concerns include teething, colic, coughs and colds, fever, and diarrhea and vomiting.
- Babies need to be loved and nurtured from birth to create a trusting bond between them and the adults who care for them, and to help create trust and interest in the world at large, which enables them to grow and to learn.
- Another way to help babies begin to learn social skills, stay safe, and begin to learn values and morals is to provide appropriate discipline from birth.
- Caregivers need to provide their babies with a safe environment in which to live and to grow.
How can I keep my infant safe?
- Caregivers can help babies to safely explore their world by attending to and fixing aspects of babies' environments that may be dangerous for them.
- Caregivers need to baby-proof not only a baby's primary home, but also the car that the baby will be transported in, and the community of other homes and environments that the baby may visit and explore.
- Caregivers can ensure a good night's sleep for their babies and themselves by following these tips to create a safe sleeping space for infants and toddlers.
- Caregivers can follow some simple guidelines to keep diaper changing safe.
- With a few precautionary measures, the family kitchen can be the center of a rich and busy family life.
- The bathroom can become a safe and pleasant place for bath time and other baby fun times if important precautions are observed.
- There are several things that caregivers can do to reduce the possibility that their children will be harmed in a fire-related situation.
- If a family is looking to bring a pet into the home (and no pet is presently in the home), they should consider waiting until their child is at least five years old.
- Concerned parents can also think about ways to make car outings occur as safely as possible.
- Backyard play areas and other segments of the home property need to be monitored and outfitted for safety.
- A solid emergency plan should be developed for handling worst-case scenarios, should they ever come to pass.
How can I stimulate my infant and enrich their life?
- It is important to think about infant stimulation or enrichment (activities that arouse or stimulate your baby's sense of sight, sound, touch, taste, and smell).
- This stimulation can help foster physical, social, emotional, brain, and nervous system development.
- You don't have to worry excessively about making sure your baby masters a rigid set of exercises or activities in the first months of life, but by being aware of the different areas of child development, you can help enrich your child's experiences and growth.
- The foremost way you provide encouragement to children is through showing them love and nurturing.
- Another way you can show your baby love and affection is through providing them with toys, songs and games as learning tools.
- From birth, you can help your baby to develop physically by giving him or her activities that help build upper body and neck strength.
- To help very young infants develop language and other cognitive skills, you can talk to your baby.
- Between ages six to twelve months, you can continue to encourage physical growth and motor skill development through interactive games and activities.
- For more social and emotional development, you can play light chasing and surprising games by crawling around the living room or other space.
- Another way to help build sociability is to expose babies to new social situations.
- By twelve months, toddlers are generally beginning to master walking on their own and caregivers can begin to build on that skill.
- By 18-24 months, children often enjoy simple pretend play.
Resources
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Articles
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Infant Development: How Your Baby Grows and Matures
- Infancy Introduction
- Infancy Physical Development
- Infancy Physical Development: Motor Development
- Infancy Physical Development: Gross Motor Skills
- Infancy Physical Development: Fine Motor Skills
- Infancy Physical Development: Average Growth
- Infancy Cognitive Development
- Infancy Cognitive Development Continued
- Infancy Cognitive Development: Language Development
- Cognitive Development: Language Development Continued
- Infancy Emotional/Social Development: Emotional Expression and Understanding
- Infancy Emotional/Social Development: Temperament
- Infancy Emotional and Social Development: Social Connections
- Infancy Sexuality and Body Awareness Development
- Infancy Conclusion
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Infant Parenting: Keeping Your Baby Healthy and Happy
- Infancy Parenting Introduction
- Holding and Physical Support
- Facilitating Growth and Movement
- Feeding and Nutrition
- How Much to Feed
- Breastfeeding
- Selecting and Preparing Bottles
- How to Feed
- Burping and Spitting Up
- When and What Solid Foods to Introduce
- How to Feed Solid Foods
- How Much to Feed Toddlers
- Weaning
- Elimination and How to Diaper
- Penis and Cord Care
- Sleeping
- Bathing
- Other Baby Hygiene
- Dressing Baby
- Soothing a Crying Baby
- Well-Baby Checks and Immunizations
- Common Baby Medical Concerns
- Common Baby Medical Concerns - Teething
- Common Baby Medical Concerns - Colic
- Common Baby Medical Concerns - Coughs and Colds
- Common Baby Medical Concerns - Fever
- Common Baby Medical Concerns - Diarrhea and Vomiting
- Nurturing children
- Discipline
- Baby Safety
- Baby Safety Continued
- Conclusion
- Infant Safety: Keeping Your Baby Safe
- Infant Enrichment: Stimulating Your Baby
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Infant Development: How Your Baby Grows and Matures
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Questions and Answers
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Links
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Videos
- What Your Baby Sees
- Safe Sleep for Babies
- Safe Sleep for Infants
- Button Batteries Sending Kids to the ER
- Uncovering Top Causes of Diaper Rash
- Holiday Travel - Child Safety Away from Home
- Safe Seats for Baby
- The Breast Feeding Boost
- Skin to Skin with your Newborn
- How to Get Your Baby to Sleep
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- Diaper Rash Dos & Don’ts
- Sunscreen Guidelines for Infants and Toddlers
- When Breastfeeding Doesn’t Come Naturally
- Diaper Dilemma: Baby Powders & Wipes
- Breast Feeding and Gluten Introduction: What Research Tells Us
- Dealing with Diaper Rash
- Strategies for Encouraging Your Child's Speech and Language Development
- Is it Baby Babble or a Sign of Speech Problems?
- Infant Hearing Loss
- Household Poisonings and Childhood Dangers
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