24
May

I know every child develops differently…

I used to get emails from a child website with stage-by-stage how she should be developing but I havent had them for a few months, so i'd like to know how shes doing!

Ta :O)


Answer:
My daughter is 17 months she’s up to about 12-15 words. she knows what a fork is used for but, at the moment her hands seem to be still better tools at picking up food. she picks up a phone that we don't use and holds it up to her ear and state hello. she try's to put shoes on her feet. she has a cabbage patch doll that has shoes on it's feet and she pulls them off cause she wants to wear them. she can climb on just about everything.

Answer:
I like those websites too. I always read the babycentre emails.
My daughter is 15 and half months old. She has always been very active rather than verbal. She has the ability to climb certain objects very well, shes trying to sing before she has the ability to talk and hit 3 notes yesterday by saying “ba ba ba!”
dancing is another of her favourite past times, she cares about music and replicating me by trying to put my boots on her feet, holding my phone to her ear and she has a thing about handbags. She has many of her own and carries them everywhere.
She adores turning the pages of her books and tries to draw when she has a crayon. Her first and only word at the moment is “tickle tickle tickle” then she’ll add “ahhh” at the end.
All tiny ones have their own tiny ways and do different things, my daughter has many but I can't think of any new milestones at the moment.

Answer:
At 17 months my daughter could say about 25 words. She could do lots of fine motor stuff, like her shape sorter, she could even lace large beads on some plastic thread. As far as mobility, she could run, falling like once a minute.

Answer:
hello if you join tesco baby/parenting club they’ll send you booklets for each stage and what they have the ability to do though the post :-) p.s vouchers to

This entry was posted on Sunday, May 24th, 2009 at 7:29 am and is filed under Toddler & Preschooler. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or TrackBack URI from your own site.

Leave a reply

Name (*)
Mail (*)
URI
Comment