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Learning Outcome

The learning outcome for this chapter is for you to explain and recognize stages and milestones in physical, social, emotional, sensory, linguistic, and cognitive development for younger toddlers from 12 to 24 months and for older toddlers from 22 to 36 months. The outcome supports the NAEYC Professional Standards and Competencies for Early Childhood Educators:

1a: Understanding the developmental period of early childhood from birth through age eight across domains and areas such as physical, cognitive, social and emotional, and linguistic (including bilingual development).

Introduction

This chapter of the book focuses on the development of toddlers and is structured to parallel Chapter 1.  Here are some facts about toddlers for you to consider prior to learning more about their development.  The “facts” are from a blog called 7 Toddler Development Facts you Probably Didn’t know by Jeff Hayward (2016).

Important milestones in toddler development at include walking without help, playing interactive games like patty-cake, and rolling a ball back and forth, sitting down from a standing position, squatting, pushing or pulling toys around the house, waving goodbye, turning pages in a book, and stacking several blocks.

DAP in a Toddler Room

Physically, a toddler practices coordinating large and small muscles. They are moving from involuntary, reflexive behaviors of infancy to deliberate, voluntary activity.  Their locomotion promotes curiosity and discovery. And sensory input helps toddlers learn how the world works. Changing body size coupled with increased coordination, balance, and stamina requires changes in play, sleep, eating, and elimination routines and patterns.

A toddler will try to copy words, and you may hear him babbling away as if he’s having a real conversation. He’ll even practice speech sounds, raising his tone when asking a question. He might say “Up-py?” when asking to be carried, for example.  During the ages of 18-24 months, a toddler  understands simple commands and questions and uses nouns that designate objects in her daily life, such as “spoon” and “car.” Starting around 24 months most toddlers can use two- to four-word sentences and sing simple tunes. Between ages 2 and 3, the toddler likely has a working vocabulary of more than 200 words and can string nouns and verbs together to form complete but simple sentences, such as “I eat now.”

Toddlers’ emotional and social development grows as well.  There are likely issues with sharing and biting, complying with requests and throwing tantrums.

How to use  developmentally appropriate practices in a Toddler Room

Offer choices to encourage independence and autonomy.

Initiate conversations to build vocabulary and communication skills. In conversations with toddlers, always attempt to convey meaning clearly (with short, direct sentences), and include appropriately challenging words to support the explosion of a toddler’s vocabulary.

Use positive guidance techniques such as careful supervision, anticipating likely behaviors,  positive encouragement and feedback, and redirecting a toddler’s attention to acceptable activities.

Prepare the environment by providing duplicate equipment, checking to ensure safety, and providing props that encourage toddlers to explore primary emotions. Create indoor and outdoor spaces for flexibility, safe sensory exploration, and physical development.

Work with families. Establish open and honest communication with toddlers’ families. Cooperation and coordination with families will provide toddlers with an added level of security and consistency as they dance between autonomy and independence.

Adapted from Mills, H. (2013).   Developmentally appropriate practices in infant and toddler classrooms.  Texas Child Care Quarterly, 37, (3).   Available at:  http://www.childcarequarterly.com/pdf/winter13_dap.pdf 

How can I learn more about developmental milestones?

As you read the Massachusetts Early Learning Guidelines for Infants and Toddlers you will notice that the learning guidelines are presented in table format. For each Guideline the indicators are divided into two sections: a) young toddler and b) older toddler. The indicators describe expected observable behaviors or skills of children which are developmental milestones.

Also, review the Zero to Three website designed for educators and families. There are many useful and helpful links to explore and discover.  You will find the toddler milestones at https://www.zerotothree.org/resources/series/your-child-s-development-age-based-tips-from-birth-to-36-months

What are the developmental considerations for toddler care?

The earliest years are all about relationships and supporting the tasks for social and emotional development during toddlerhood include:

  • Mobile younger toddlers (12 to 18 months) are eager to explore.
  • Toddlers (16 to 36 months) are working on their identity; they want to know who they are and who’s in charge.
Lally, Torres, and Phelps (2010) list six key components of early group experience essential to toddler development: group size; quality of the physical environment; primary caregiving assignments; continuity of care; cultural and familial continuity; and meeting the needs of the individual within the group context.

Group Size

Childcare programs create chaos and confusion when they put too many toddlers in one group, even with an appropriate number of adult caregivers. As the number of children increases, so does the noise level, stimulation, and general chaos.  Children may appear lost and wander aimlessly and discovery through play is inhibited. Smaller groups mean fewer distractions and more focused activities for toddlers. In small groups, toddlers can make connections, form relationships, and learn to understand peers.

NAEYC (2013)  recommends the following group size and ratios for toddlers.

Age Range for Toddlers Group size = 6 Group size= 8 Group size = 10 Group size = 12
12 to 28 months 1:3 1:4 1:4 1:4
21 to 36 months 1:4 1:5 1:6

The 2010 MA licensing regulations have requirements for programs for group size and ratio. The regulations state:

  1. All group assignments must be developmentally appropriate for the individual child.
  2. The group size must be appropriate for the activities planned and for the characteristics of children assigned to the group.
  3. Each child must be assigned to a consistent group with consistent staffing.
  4. Children may be assigned to fixed age groups outside their chronologically defined age group based on a review of the child’s most recent progress report or a narrative from the child’s parent addressing the child’s abilities in the areas of mobility, fine and gross motor control, communication, social interactions, and cognition.

Fixed Age Groups. 

Regulation Number Age Group / Full or Half Day Program Maximum Group Size Educator / Child Ratio Educator Qualifications
7.10(9)(b)1 Infants (up to 15 months old)
(Full or Half Day)
7 1: 3, 1 additional educator for 4 – 7 infants At least 1 Infant/Toddler Teacher, per 7.09(18)(c)2
7.10(9)(b)2 Toddlers (15 to 33 months) (Full or Half Day) 9 1:4, 1 additional educator for 5 – 9 toddlers At least 1 Infant/Toddler Teacher, per 7.09(18)(c)2

The mixed age group ratios and groupings (below) may be used by large group and school childcare programs.

Regulation Number Age Group Maximum Group Size Educator / Child Ratio Educator Qualifications
7.10(9)(c)1 Infant / Toddler Group 9; no more than 3 infants 1:3; 1 additional educator for 4 – 9 children At least 1 Infant/Toddler Teacher, per 7.09(18)(c)2
7.10(9)(c)2 Toddler / Preschool Group 9 1:5; 1 additional educator for 6 – 9 children At least 1 Infant/Toddler and Preschool Teacher, per 7.09(18)(c)2

The Environment

The physical environment supports or hinders relationships.  Research suggests that in safe environments caregivers smiled more, encouraged exploration, and gave fewer negative comments. Additionally, the environment affects educators and family relationships. A comfortable place for adults within the children’s environment can encourage families to visit throughout the day. A place for adults to sit comfortably for a moment at the end of the day acknowledges their needs and encourages conversation.

The environment affects peer relationships. The amount and arrangement of space and the choice and abundance of play materials can either increase the chances that young children will interact positively with each other or increase the likelihood of biting, fighting over toys, and wandering.

To promote health, easy access to the outdoors is desirable as it will accommodate the daily rhythms of toddlers. In many centers, time on the playground is rigidly scheduled and may not accommodate the needs of toddlers.  Access to a playground as needed would allow teachers to respond to a child’s changing needs.  Additionally, toddlers need small amounts of food and drink throughout the day to support their emotional, social, and physical well-being.  A small refrigerator will allow educators to offer snacks to toddlers frequently.

Use the questions below to assess the appropriateness of a physical environment for toddlers.

Safety — Are all the electrical outlets covered? Is there adequate padding under climbing equipment in case of a child falling? Are the walkways clear and unobstructed? Is the play area fenced in? Are there first aid supplies available?

Health — Is the diapering area kept separate from the food preparation and feeding areas? Are the food preparation, feeding, and toileting areas cleaned and sanitized daily and after each use. Do the children get fresh air every day?

Comfort — Is there soft furniture accessible to the children? Are there safe, comfortable, adequate sleeping arrangements? Is there furniture that is both child-sized and adult-sized in the rooms? Can toddlers sit and stand as they choose?

Convenience — Is there easy access to sinks for adults and children? Are the materials and supplies stored near routines and activities?

Encourages Movement — Do toddlers have enough space to crawl, roll, pull up, walk, climb, run, jump and explore when both indoors and outdoors?

Allows for Choice — Are the toddlers offered choices at mealtimes and during activities?

Ensures accessibility — Are the toys out at the children’s level? Can toddlers reach toys and materials independently? Are there spaces for both quiet and active play? Are there toys to represent imaginative play, constructive play, sensory play and literacy? Are toddlers allowed to play with sand, water, dress up clothes, etc.?

Educator Scheduling

MA licensing regulations support best practices in scheduling with the regulation: Each child must be assigned to a consistent group with consistent staffing. The assignment of a primary educator means the child’s family, the administrator, and educator know who is principally responsible for that child. Primary caregiving does not mean that one person cares for an infant or toddler exclusively, all of the time as there will be team teaching. Primary caregiving ensures that the toddler can build an intimate relationship with at least one educator.

The way it should be

Tim and his mother had visited the center twice in the last week. They had spent time with Mindy, who told them she would be Tim’s primary caregiver. Both Tim and his mother felt comfortable with Mindy. She was interested in them, wanted to talk regularly about Tim’s progress, and seemed to understand how Tim’s mother felt about leaving Tim to go to work. To Tim, today felt much the same, but his mother knew she was going to leave him for several hours and had told him so. Mindy met them at the door, squatted down to speak to Tim, who smiled shyly, remembering her, and then walked with mother and child to the small rocking horse that Tim had so enjoyed the last: time. A small boy rushed by and bumped Tim quite hard. Mindy caught the little boy and talked quietly to him, introduced him to Tim, and sent him on his way. Tim got on the horse and Mindy sat nearby where a somewhat bigger girl was building with blocks and a boy was working with large puzzle pieces. Mindy attended to all of them in turn as they wanted her attention or help. These were her three, and she always kept a special eye on them.

When it was time for her to go, Tim’s mother reminded him she was leaving today. He looked surprised and climbed off the horse. Mindy picked him up and said, “Let’s go to the door and say good-bye to your mother.” Tim wanted to go with his mother. But his mother really seemed to be going to leave him, so he clung closer to Mindy, who cuddled him and talked quietly. Then his mother was gone. It was like everyone in the world was holding their breath at the same time, but Mindy held him and patted him and talked quietly, and then everyone began to breathe again. Tim could see the toys and children, but mostly he liked hearing Mindy’s voice. Ten minutes later, ‘Tim was on his horse. He wasn’t as wholly confident as 20 minutes before, but he could still ride, and Mindy was close by and always noticed when he looked at her.

Two weeks later: After his mother kissed him, Tim waved good-bye and then he said, “Hi” again to Mindy, who ruffled his hair. Tim made a beeline for the block area, but when he got there Wong Chen had corralled all of the red blocks Tim wanted. Tim squatted down and watched Wong Chen. In a minute, Mindy came over and squatted down too, and they both watched him. Then Mindy said, “Tim likes those blocks too, Wong Chen; would you let him play?” Wong Chen looked at the floor, and then he looked up and frowned at Mindy and then at Tim. Mindy said, “OK, Wong Chen, then Tim can use them later.” And then to Tim, while pointing to some bristle blocks, “Maybe you’d like these? I don’t think anyone has those.” As Tim started to walk away, Wong Chen handed him one red block and Mindy said, “Thank you, Wong Chen, we’ll use that.”

…Later, Tim started to build a big car with red blocks, a car like his mother’s red car. His mother was working. She would come later. “Mommy later,” Tim said. Mindy heard him. “She will, Tim,” said Mindy. “She’ll come after your nap.“ “After nap,” said Tim, and then he said, “See my car?”

Tim is learning a lot in this center. He feels important, heard, understood, and protected.  Mindy helps him negotiate the difficult things with peers. He is learning to cooperate and to pay attention to what other children need and want. There is enough space, there are enough providers, just enough children, and abundant affection for everyone.

Continuity of Care

Having one caregiver over an extended period of time rather than switching every 6 -9 months is important to the child’s development. The educational practice of looping is described in an article, I encourage you to read, Nitecki, E. (2017).  Looping and Attachment in Early Childhood Education: How the Applications of Epigenetics Demand a Change. Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 17, (2), 85-100. doi: 10.14434/josotl.v17i2.20840

Nitecki (2017) reviews the literature on looping and reports the benefits and challenges of the practice.  She conducted a research study in a preschool Montessori program.  She reported these findings which list some of the challenges of looping.

Specific Benefits

Specific Challenges

Teacher develops strong relationships with children over time and development, which has social-emotional and learning implications.

Practicality in schools with high staff turnover.

Consistency of relationships allow for open communication about stress at home

A good fit between teacher and child or persistence of negative relationships over time.

Behavior problems are minimal because teachers know what to expect from the children.

The child’s ability to transition and adapt to a new teacher/school after spending so long with a familiar teacher.

Extended learning time for older students who do not need transitional time at the beginning of the year.

The teacher’s ability to adapt to new age groups and the challenges each present.

Teachers have opportunities for extended learning by having to be innovative over the years and adapt to different age groups.

Parents develop bonds with the teacher over time, leading to more investment in the school, volunteering, and support of learning at home.

What do you think about the practice of looping?  How might it work in a childcare program you observed or worked in? 

5. Cultural and Familial Continuity

Childcare should be in harmony with what goes on at home, following the form and style of what is familiar to the child. Self-reflection is key to culturally sensitive care, and we will explore this more as the course progresses.  No matter what routine you perform, your values about it are shaped by your childhood, education, and cultural influences. It is essential to recognize these values and understand that you are transmitting them to children. To provide cultural and familial continuity, childcare centers should employ culturally representative educators who speak the same language as the children.

What are your experiences with culturally representative educators in the programs you observed in or worked in?

6. Meeting the Needs of the Individual in a Group

An intimate setting recognizes toddlers’ individual needs to explore, assert autonomy, and periodically reconnect with the secure base their caregiver provides. Nutritious snacks are available (often the focus of spontaneous socializing), potty training occurs as the individual child is ready, and ways are found for the toddler to re-visit her old crib if that is important. In an intimate setting, a child with special needs can be accommodated.

Development in the Domains

Social-Emotional Development

The Massachusetts Department of Early Education and Care (EEC)  Massachusetts early learning guidelines for infants and toddlers (2010), define social development as the child’s ability to relate to and interact with people. Toddlers are scientists, experimenting with interactions that occur between themselves and the people around them. Be mindful that you are a role model of behavior and culture for the toddler.

Emotional development is defined as understanding the self, feelings, and regulation of behavior. (2010) Emotional development is based on attachment. Emotional development is supported through consistent, responsive and caring relationships and routine.

What skills do children develop? The ability to:

  • relate to, trust, and develop an attachment to caregivers.
  • interact with peers.
  • experience and express a range of emotions.
  • self-regulation
  • the positive sense of self
  • initiative

REMEMBER

  • Social and emotional development impacts all other areas of development and is the foundation for all future development.
  • Toddlers will carry inside the impact of the relationships with caregivers at this stage of life; setting the foundation for school readiness and lifelong success. When caregivers are loving, responsive and consistent, toddlers learn they are valued and the world is primarily satisfying and predictable.
  • Research shows that children who have healthy social and emotional skills tend to learn better, are more likely to stay in school, and will be better able to make and keep lifelong friends.

REFLECT

  • How will you promote secure relationships with toddlers?
  • How will you encourage toddlers to experience, regulate, and express emotions?

For further information

Read:  Center for the Social and Emotional Foundations for Early Learning article Your Child’s Cues from Birth to Age 2 available at http://csefel.vanderbilt.edu/documents/reading_cues.pdf

Language and Communication Development

By around 12 months many toddlers can say one or two words with meaning and can comply with simple requests, such as get your jacket or respond to questions like where is your blanket?  The toddler points to pictures in a book when you name them, and can point to a few body parts. They listen to simple stories and enjoy hearing songs or rhymes. In fact, often they will want the same story, rhyme or game repeated often. Expect the toddler to add words every month. Soon you may see them use telegraphic speech, where 2 words convey the meaning of a sentence. Such as “Where ball?” “What’s that?” “More ‘nana?” “Kitty go”.Words become clearer as more initial consonants are used.

Between 2 to 3 years of age, toddlers will likely develop the ability to follow two-part instructions (‘Get your hat and put it on the chair’) and use 2-3 word sentences. They notice sounds like the telephone or doorbell ringing and may point or become excited, get you to answer, or attempt to answer themselves.

REMEMBER

As toddlers develop, expect to see

  • An understanding of spoken (or signed) language (receptive language)
  • Use of expressive language
  • Participation in social communication
  • Asking questions and telling stories (narratives)
  • Increased ability to produce sounds accurately and put words together to make meaning (phonology and syntax)
  • An interest in books and listening to stories
  • Beginning to use writing tools.

For further information

Read Fuligni, A. S., Hoff, E., Zepeda, M., & Mangione, P. (March 2014). Development of infants and toddlers who are dual language learners. Working paper #2. Center for Early Care and Education Research-Dual Language Learners (CECER-DLL). Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina, Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute.

To review the milestones take about 15 minutes and complete an online training course, Watch Me! Celebrating Milestones and Sharing Concerns, (http://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/watchmetraining/module2.html)

Key Takeaway – Toddler’s Cognitive Development

In order to plan and work with toddlers, we need to understand how they think.  Still, in an early stage of cognitive development, toddlers think in fundamentally different ways from older children and adults. Toddlers’ brains are partially developed. As a result, toddlers think in fundamentally different ways from adults. Interpreting toddler behavior according to adult logic is pointless – and it sometimes leads us to draw conclusions that aren’t always helpful. Toddlers make much more sense if you step inside their heads and try and see the world from their level of development.

Anita Cleare, a Parenting specialist, provides an insight into how toddlers’ brains work so that we can interpret toddler behavior accurately.   Here are some scenarios to further explain toddler thinking.

  • Educator: “The purpose of this walk is to get to the park.”
  • Educator thinks:  Why can’t she walk from A to B without being distracted by a leaf?
  • Toddler: “Wow, look at that shiny wrapper blowing along the ground!”

The part of the brain that enables adults to focus on a task and resist distractions is called the pre-frontal cortex. The pre-frontal cortex is involved in thinking, planning, and focusing and it isn’t well developed in toddlers’ brains. In fact, the pre-frontal cortex isn’t fully functioning until the teenage years. In essence, toddlers lack the wiring in the brain that inhibits distractions.

  • Educator: “Stop being so obsessive, the blue cup is in the dishwasher.”
  • Educator thinks:  Why isn’t the green cup as good as the blue cup?
  • Toddler: “No green!.”

The cognitive ability to understand that the same amount of juice is the same amount of juice no matter which cup it is in (a thought process called ‘conservation’) does not develop until age 6 or 7. If you pour a drink from a short wide cup to a tall thin cup a toddler will believe there is more drink in the tall wide cup even if she watched you pour it from one cup to another. Toddlers’ brains simply can’t compute that different shapes and sizes of containers can hold the same amount of drink. And the juice in the green cup really is different from the juice in the blue cup because it looks different. It will take a few more years of water play and repetitively pouring water from one container to another for her to grasp the abstract concepts of volume, size, and transferability.

  • Educator: “No thank you, you can’t take toys from the other children.”
  • Educator thinks:  Why can’t toddlers share?
  • Toddler: “It’s mine.”

Toddlers are intrinsically selfish and egocentric. This isn’t a moral judgment, it is simply that toddlers’ brains have not yet developed the cognitive sophistication to understand that other people exist in their own right and that other people have thoughts and feelings that might be different from their own. They don’t yet have a ‘theory of mind’ that enables them to put themselves in someone else’s shoes. In a toddler’s head, if he knows, thinks, or feels something then everyone else also knows, thinks, or feels it at the same time.  When he takes the toy, it isn’t an act of aggression, it is simply the logical fulfillment of a desire.

  • Educator: “You got hurt, there is no blood so no Band-Aid, I’ll kiss your boo-boo.”
  • Educator thinks:  What a drama queen!
  • Toddler: “Need a Band-Aid!!”
  • The toddler thinks: Help! I’m broken! Fix me!

Toddlers make no distinction between the physical, mental, or emotional “me,” so every little mark, real or imagined, is an insult to self. That’s why a 2-year-old will sob over every hangnail. Band-Aids offer concrete comfort. “They’re a tangible way of saying, ‘I know that you have been wronged, your body has been wronged, here’s something that will make it better.'” Your best bet: Skip the reasoning, stock up on an ample supply of bandages, and take advantage while you can of their miraculous tear-stopping powers.

  • Educator: “It’s time to get your jacket on so we can go outdoors.”
  • Educator thinks:   We only have 20 minutes left of outdoor time, by the time she finishes outdoor time is over
  • Toddler: “Me do it!
  • The toddler thinks: I know I can do it!

Toddlers will test their autonomy. We want the toddler to be self-sufficient, even though at the moment you want to get them out the door. Remember that everything takes longer with a toddler and start earlier. Also, let the toddler do the parts they can do and help with what they can’t.

Other cognitive characteristics for toddlers are magical thinking and living in the present.  Magical thinking means they’re unable to distinguish the real from the imaginary and frequently attribute living characteristics to inanimate objects: The moon follows them, trees wave to them, the car “sleeps” in the garage, and the bathtub drain swallows whole tubs of water — so why not them too? Toddlers exist entirely in the present, they don’t have a concept of three, never mind three days from now.  Because toddlers exist in a “timeless” universe means they’re as reluctant to hurry as they are to wait.

 

To learn more:

Parks, L. (2014).  Sensorimotor development: Hands-on activities for infants and toddlers, Texas Child Care Quarterly, 37, ( 4) available at:  http://www.childcarequarterly.com/pdf/spring14_infants.pdf

Purdue University. (2007, October 18). Young Toddlers Think In Terms Of The Whole Object, Not Just Parts. ScienceDaily. Retrieved August 3, 2017 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/10/071017174331.htm

Physical Health and Well Being

The physical health and well-being domain focuses on how toddlers learn about their bodies. During the toddler years, children are learning to use and control objects and do things for themselves. Physical health and well being include many components:

  • Motor development (large and small muscles or gross and fine motor)
  • Use of the senses to guide and integrate interactions
  • Skills for healthy life practices
    • Eating
    • Sleeping
    • Toileting
    • Hygiene practices

Examples of typical toddler development in this domain include the following lists are from the North Carolina Division of Child Development: Infant Toddler Foundations (2008).  The document is available from http://ncchildcare.dhhs.state.nc.us/pdf_forms/dcd_infant_toddler_health_physical_development.pdf

Nutrition

Young toddlers may begin to:

  • Want to feed themselves.
  • Eagerly participate in snacks and mealtimes.
  • Bite, chew and swallow soft food smoothly.
  • Show interest in many types of food and no interest in other foods.
  • Eat inconsistently (eat a lot at one meal and little at the next, be too busy playing to eat).
  • Ask for food when hungry or accept food when offered.
  • Be willing to try new foods.

Older toddlers may begin to:

  • Enjoy helping with meal and snack routines (set table, wash hands, throw away trash).
  • Bite and chew solid food more easily.
  • Accept or refuse food depending on their appetite and interest.
  • Notice and talk about food textures, temperatures, and tastes (crunchy crackers, warm soup, sweet apples).
  • Understand that some foods are good for them (fresh fruits, vegetables, milk) and some are not very healthy (potato chips, soda).

Sleep

Young toddlers may begin to:

  • Show they know when it is time to sleep (points at the bed, get blanket).
  • Cooperate with sleep routines (choose a book, get preferred sleep toy).
  • Use simple sounds, gestures, or words to show they are tired.

Older toddlers may begin to:

  • Use words for being tired.
  • Initiate and participate in sleep routines (wash hands after lunch, get blanket, lie down on bed or mat).
  • Fall asleep on their own.

Physical Activity

Young toddlers may begin to:

  • Anticipate and ask for outdoor play (points at door and say “Out!”; resist coming indoors).
  • Engage in regular and sustained movement (rides toy all around the play yard, go up and down the slide over and over).
  • Develop strength and stamina as they use large muscles and participate in physical activity for longer periods of time.
  • Enjoy active play and seek to be physically active (choose to play often on the climber, laugh and squeal while running).

Older toddlers may begin to:

  • Engage in lively movements by choice for long periods of time indoors and outdoors.
  • Enjoy more complex movement activities (running, jumping, and skipping).
  • Match body movements to rhythm (move slowly to slow music, dance in time with the music).
  • Show pride in new skills and strengths (ask others to watch them, say “I’m big and strong!”).

Self Care

  • Use simple sign language, facial expressions, sounds or words to tell you what they need.
  • Cooperate and help with care routines (mouth-care, hand-washing, diapering, dressing, bathing).
  • Drink from a cup and feed themselves with their fingers or a spoon.
  • Protect personal objects and space from others.
  • Help with clean-up routines.
  • Show excitement at completing self- care tasks (show teeth after brushing, hold up hands after washing).
  • Cooperate with medical care, positioning, and use of adaptive equipment.
  • Identify and use objects and follow routines that are comforting (get their blanket and lie down where they usually sleep, pick out a favorite books to be read before lunch).

Older toddlers may begin to:

  • Use words or sign language to ask for the things they need (food when hungry, drink when thirsty, go outdoors when they need to be physically active).
  • Soothe themselves when needed (find a quiet area for alone time, look at a book before nap).
  • Increase independence with basic self-help skills (pull up pants, put on socks, shoes, and hat).
  • Remember and imitate details of self- care routines (talk through steps while washing hands; tell doll how to brush teeth during pretend play).
  • Start self-care routines and complete some steps independently (undressing, hand washing, brushing teeth).
  • Understand the role of people who help children stay healthy (doctors, nurses, dentists).
  • Show appreciation for possessions (put toys away, handle materials carefully).
  • Use adaptive equipment, ask for help with positioning and movement, or participate in medical care routines as needed.

Safety Awareness

Young toddlers may begin to:

  • Experience cause and effect (going downhill fast cause falls; turning the TV up too loud hurts ears).
  • Show some caution on uneven ground and heights.
  • Notice and imitate adult reactions to dangerous people and situations.
  • Respond to warnings and directions from others.
  • Understand the difference between what should be eaten and what should not.

Older toddlers may begin to:

  • Remember cause and effect experiences and apply their experiences to future situations (avoid touching cold railing, walk slowly downhill where fall happened).
  • Increase self-control over their impulses.
  • Recognize and avoid situations that might be unsafe.
  • Understand what their bodies can do and understand their limits.
  • Watch for adult reactions to unfamiliar things or situations that might be dangerous.
  • Understand and follow basic health and safety rules. They still require close supervision from caregivers to follow these health and safety rules consistently.
  • Feel proud when they follow safety rules and ashamed when they do not (say, “Look, I waited!” at a corner; hang head after trying to reach forbidden item).

Health

When toddlers visit their pediatrician, the doctor will check the toddler’s developmental progress. Doctors may give a screening test to help identify developmental delays and autism at the 24- or 30-month visit. Child safety is another topic likely discussed at well-child visits. The doctor may talk about the importance of using car seats, closely watching children around swimming pools, preventing poisoning, not smoking around children, using sunscreen, and gun safety.

Did you know that toddlers have an average of 6 to 8 colds a year,  several bouts of diarrhea and vomiting, as well as ear infection?. Sleep problems and behavioral challenges are very common at this age and can be frustrating for caregivers. I invite you to look at the MedlinePlus web site to explore resources related to the health of toddlers.

Key Takeaway

It took me many years to see caring as the core of curriculum excellence. The deep assumption about caring is that it is something anyone can do, but we do not take care of human beings the same way we take care of a house or a lawn. In childhood, the sensations of the body are the pathways to the child’s intellect and emotions. Caring routines involve engagement around bodily functions (elimination, cleaning, eating, sleeping) and therefore they hold the most intimate importance. The way we touch children increases or diminishes their self-worth. Our care of children’s bodies is directly connected to the care of their minds.

Carol Garboden Murray in the July/August 2017 edition of Exchange magazine

Phases Of Early Childhood Development
Infographic to illustrate early childhood development

Visually.

 Approaches to Learning

Infants develop attention, curiosity, and gather information. Toddlers build on these skills and this section will focus on memory, persistence, and problem-solving. When playing either in structured or unstructured activities throughout the day gives the toddler an opportunity to develop, learn and practice new skills.

Play allows children to make choices; make decisions; solve problems, interact with others; pursue their interest; build language and literacy skills; discover mathematical concepts; and experience themselves as capable, competent, successful learners. (Dodge 2006, p.161.)

Expect toddlers to be eager and curious as a learner. If given opportunities to explore and experiment, they will likely become intentional and persistent in their learning and discovery. I invite you to read the article from News You Can Use (August 2012) Foundations of School: Approaches toward Learning.  Then review and reflect on what you learned.

Remember

  • A 28-month-old can reliably remember events, even up to 3 months after they happen (Fivush & Hamond, 1989). The components of memory require different abilities: the ability to hold objects and people in mind even when they cannot be seen (object permanence), to keep recent information in mind in order to perform a task (working memory), and to remember events from the past (long-term memory).
  • Persistence is the ability to work toward a specific goal despite challenges or feelings of frustration.
  • Problem-solving is how we figure things out. Remember that toddlers usually create their own “problems” to solve with the goals they have in mind.

Reflect

  • Remember a time when you learned something new. How did memory, persistence, and problem-solving help you learn?
  • Persistence and problem-solving skills can vary widely from child to child depending on temperament. How do you support children who have different natural abilities in these areas? How might temperament affect “persistence through frustration?”

References

Dodger, D. T., Rudick, S., & Berke, K. (2006). The Creative Curriculum for Infants,Toddlers and Twos. Washington, D.C.: Teaching Strategies.

Fivush, R., & Hamond, N. R. (1989). Time and again: Effects of repetition and retention interval on 2-year-olds’ event recall. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 47(2), 259-273

 

Read and Participate

  1. Read Massachusetts Early Learning Guidelines for Infants and Toddlers Section III: Toddlers (12 months to 33 months) pages 85-159.
  2. Complete the reading reflection using information from this chapter and the Early Learning Guidelines.  Use your responses from the reading reflection to participate in the Blackboard or face-to-face class discussion.

Assignment

I designed this assignment to increase your competency in family engagement and to be familiar with a widely used screening tool in Massachusetts.   Family engagement is essential for effective screening and assessment of infants and toddlers. Information from multiple sources and settings is critical to capturing an accurate description of the child’s development. The families’ perspective is helpful in gathering information about the child’s activities and capacities in the home. Families see their child in the child’s ultimate “comfort zone,” and have the advantage of observing developmental indicators that may not emerge in the less familiar childcare setting. The Ages and Stages Questionnaire is a screening tool designed to be completed by families.

For an overview of appropriate screening practices, read the document produced in 2009 by the National Infant & Toddler Child Care Initiative @ ZERO TO THREE.  The document is titled:  Supporting Infant and Toddler Development; Screening, and Assessment.  To get an overview of the Ages and Stages Questionnaire, watch a 9-minute YouTube Video by Eagle Media produced in 2015.  The video is titled You & Your Young Child: Ages and Stages Questionnaire 

 

To complete the assignment:

Toddler ASQ Requirements

  1. Locate a toddler from 15 to 33 months.
  2. Complete the appropriate age group for ASQ 3 and ASQ 2SE available on Blackboard.
  3. Use the correct questionnaire and scoring sheets for a toddler at 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 27, 30 OR 33 months.
  4. After completing the questionnaire, write a paper where you will answer the following questions:
    1. Describe a typical child of the age you observed and how the child you assessed is typical, developing above age level, or if there are concerns about development.
    2. What are the factors that affect this toddler’s development?
    3. What is the child’s learning and interaction style?
    4. What learning experiences might support this child’s unique strengths and characteristics?
    5. Insert photos of the ASQ forms. 

ASQ Grading Rubric and Sample Paper available on Blackboard.

References

J. Ronald Lally, J. R. , Torres, Y. L., Phelps, P. C. (2010).  How to Care for Infants and Toddlers in Groups. Adapted from a plenary presentation at ZERO TO THREE’s 1993 National Training Institute in Washington, D.C.  Available at: https://www.zerotothree.org/resources/77-how-to-care-for-infants-and-toddlers-in-groups

License

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Infant and Toddler Education and Care Copyright © 2017 by Dr. Susan Eliason is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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