Child Development Ages & Stages
Children go through distinct periods of development as they move
from infants to young adults. During each of these stages multiple
changes in the development of the brain are taking place. What occurs and
approximately when these developments take place are genetically determined.
However, environmental circumstances and exchanges with key individuals
within that environment have significant influence on how each child benefits
from each developmental event.
Ages
and Stages is a term used to broadly outline key periods in the human
development timeline. During each stage growth and development occur in
the primary developmental domains including physical, intellectual, language
and social – emotional. Our goal is to help parents understand what
is taking place in their child’s brain and body during each period with the
hope that they will be able to provide the necessary support, encouragement,
structure and interventions to enable a child to progress through each stage as
easily and successfully as possible based on each child’s unique set of traits
and interests.
Infants/Babies
(0 – 2 years)
Raising a baby, especially for the first time, is both exciting and challenging. This is a time for developing the bonds that will last a lifetime providing the child with the inner resources to develop self-esteem and the ability to relate positively with others. It is also the time for parents to begin to discover who this new person really is. Each child is unique and it is imperative that parents learn to understand, respect, support and encourage the unique characteristics and abilities of each child.
Toddlers/Preschoolers
(2 – 5 years)
When
a child takes the first step on his or her own, a new phase in development
begins. At this stage children are now free to roam around their world.
It is a time for active exploration of their environment. Language
development takes major leaps which leads to learning the names of objects of
interest, the ability to ask for things and as they discover their independent
nature, yes, they develop the ability to say “NO!”.
During
this developmental stage, a major challenge is developing what psychologists
call emotional regulation. “Meltdowns” are common during this period but
parents can use the bond developed during infancy to help the child learn to
modulate their emotional expression and begin to grasp the difficult concept of
delay of gratification. While they instinctively seem to be able to say
“NO” toddlers also need help in learning how to accept “No” from others.
This
is also a stage of rapid physical and intellectual development preparing these
children for starting school which includes interacting cooperatively with
peers while at the same time being able to compete physically and
intellectually. A child’s parent is in the position to be a coach
providing just the right combination of encouragement, support and guidance.
Parents also need to serve as primary teacher for the mastery of basic
learning skills and encourage active discussion and experimentation of new
concepts and skills.
School
Age Children (6 – 12 years)
Raising
school age children can be awesome. Watching them try new activities,
cheering them on at athletic events and applauding their accomplishments at
recitals are usually some of the high points for most parents. However,
achieving success is often preceded with frustration and sometimes learning to
accept one’s weaknesses as will as celebrating and building on strengths.
When will equipped parents can be excellent coaches for their child no
matter what the endeavor.
While
toddlers and preschoolers need constant supervision, school age children become
gradually ready for more independence. However, learning to make good
choices and exercise self-discipline does not come easily for many.
Parents need to impart a moral code that the child gradually
internalizes. As children struggle with these important tasks parents
must be able to provide praise and encouragement for achievement but parents
must also be able to allow them to sometimes experience the natural
consequences for their behavior or provide logical consequences to help them
learn from mistakes.
Adolescents/Teenagers
(13 – 18 years)
There is no doubt that for most families, the teen years present a
challenge for both parents and children.
Middle
School is not fondly remembered by most who attend. It is often fraught
with scary body changes, bullying by peers and a new surge for independence.
This leads to passive-aggressive behavior (“I’ll do it in a minute”),
self-consciousness (“What are you staring at?”) and self-doubt (“I’m not good
at anything.”) and/or over-confidence (“Well, I thought I could do that.”) and
of course moodiness (“Leave me alone.”).
High
School is usually better for most. It is a time to really begin defining
ones self and realistically contemplating the future. Skill development
is accelerated to prepare for college or job training programs. Talents
are perfected. Social skills are honed and relationships take on more of
a serious nature. Peer pressure is at its max and in today’s teen society
there are more tempting sidetracks than ever.
During
adolescence, kids need their parents more than ever. Research shows that
a positive family environment including fun family activities, open
parent-child communication and the encouragement to participate in positive
extracurricular and community activities, teens are able to navigate these
years with relative ease.
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