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  • Slide 1
  • Infant and Toddler Development Part 4: 18-36 Months Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service Core In-Service November 18, 2008 10:00-11:30 a.m. Debbie Richardson, M.S. Parenting Assistant Extension Specialist Human Development & Family Science Oklahoma State University 111.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson
  • Slide 2
  • Introduction 2 Welcome Centra Instructions Overview of In-service Resource Materials 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson
  • Slide 3
  • In-Service Objective 3 Extension Educators will be able to describe growth, tasks, behaviors, and abilities of toddlers from 18 through 36 months including physical, cognitive, social and emotional development. 11.13.2008 Infant-Toddler Dev 3, D. Richardson
  • Slide 4
  • 18-20 Months (1 Years) 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson4
  • Slide 5
  • 18-20 Months Cognition Demonstrates functional use of objects toward objects. Appropriately uses most common objects & toys. Images & words associated with familiar objects. More tool use emerging. May find hidden toys/objects. Nests 2-3 cups. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson5
  • Slide 6
  • 18-20 Months Cognition (contd) Recognizes self in mirror. Autosymbolic play pretends basic tasks. Problem-solving through symbolic combinations. Begins spontaneous symbolic play. Places circles and squares in a foam board. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson6
  • Slide 7
  • 18-20 Months Language Vocabulary spurt. Uses lots of gestures with words to get needs met (pointing, taking you by the hand). Uses at least 4 different consonants in babbling words. Beginning true verbal communication; words following functional & semantic relations. Names an object or picture; points to pictures of familiar objects (2-5) upon request. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson7
  • Slide 8
  • 18-20 Months Language (contd) Says several single words; starting to combine words (all gone; more milk, daddy go, etc.). Says whats that? to elicit object names. Repeats words overheard in conversation. Comprehends 50+ words. Understands most words you use. Can say about 15 words. Points to 3 body parts on self. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson8
  • Slide 9
  • 18-20 Months Social-Emotional Plays alone with toys about 5+ minutes. Shows toy preferences. Play varies with one toy. Plays independently in company of peers. Imitates another child at play. Enjoys having simple stories read. Fears: separation from parent, toliet, injury, strangers Strong wish for independence. Sometimes says no. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson9
  • Slide 10
  • 18-20 Months Gross Motor Walks without using arms for balance. Climbs/steps up & down stairs with some assistance. Throws ball toward intended direction, up to 3 feet. Walks into ball; Kicks ball forward. Trots or walks fast; running stiffly. Stand on one foot while hands are held. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson10
  • Slide 11
  • 18-20 Months Fine Motor Towers 3-4 blocks. Turns single pages of cardboard book. Uses spoon; feeds self pretty well. Drinks from open cup independently with minimal spilling. Cooperates with tooth brushing; wash & dry hands. Removes simple articles of clothing without help. Pulls apart snap beads. Imitates a vertical stroke. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson11
  • Slide 12
  • 21-24 Months (approaching 2 years) 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson12
  • Slide 13
  • 21-24 Months Cognition Mentally remembers object and figures out where it went. Brings object from another room on request. Symbolic play extends beyond childs self. Performs pretend activities on more than one person or object. Follows directions; generally unable to remember rules. Distinguishes between food and non-food substances. Completes 3 piece form board. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson13
  • Slide 14
  • 21-24 Months Cognition (contd) Stacks & knocks down blocks; fills then turns over container to dump out. Nests 3-4 cups. Combines 2 objects in play. Attempts to mend a broken toy. Representational play daily experiences such as playing house; plays with dolls. Events short and isolated; no true sequence. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson14
  • Slide 15
  • 21-24 Months Language Uses sentence of 2-3 words. Names 2-3 objects or pictures. Follows simple commands/instructions without gestures. Repeats words. May refer to objects or persons not present. Identifies & points to 3-5 body parts on self when asked. Uses please and thank you if prompted. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson15
  • Slide 16
  • 21-24 Months Language (contd) Beginning word combinations with meaning. Uses animal sounds or names them. Responds to yes/no questions with head shake. Talks to self & jabbers expressively. Hums, tries to sing. Listens to short rhymes, finger plays. Enjoys looking at picture books. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson16
  • Slide 17
  • 21-24 Months Says 8-10 + words; pronunciation may be unclear. Uses about 40-50 words. Correctly pronounces most vowels, addl consonants. Begins to use other speech sounds. May be able to use prepositions. Phrases & short sentences. Adding grammatical elements. Able to speak & be understood about the time. Vocabulary of several hundred words. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson17
  • Slide 18
  • 21-24 Months Social-Emotional Same fears continue through age 2 - separation from parent, toilet, injury, strangers and may expand. Separation anxiety may be fading, but still shy around strangers. May become increasingly enthusiastic about company of other children; engages in parallel play. Make-believe play; enjoys role-playing. Imitates behavior and past events. Increasing attention span. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson18
  • Slide 19
  • 21-24 Months Social-Emotional (contd) Helps in simple household tasks. Picks up & puts away toys on request. Understanding of own autonomy; shows independent behavior; wants my way; likes to boss others. Usually responds to correction; stops behavior. Defends possessions; expresses ownership; doesnt understand sharing. Finds it difficult to wait; wants things right now. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson19
  • Slide 20
  • 21-24 Months Social-Emotional (contd) Communicates needs such as thirst, hunger, bathroom. Shows sympathy to other children; may try to comfort. Likes to please others; afraid of disapproval & rejection; enjoys adult attention. May show anger by slapping, biting, and hitting. Sometimes stubborn and defiant; says its mine, go away, I dont like it, no a lot. Gets angry sometimes and has temper tantrums. Refers to self by name. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson20
  • Slide 21
  • 21-24 Months Gross Motor Good balance & coordination. Steps up and down stairs without assistance. Runs with better coordination, about 10 ft. w/out falling. Climbs onto and down from furniture unsupported. Jumps down step with 1 foot forward with assistance. Jumps up 2 with both feet together. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson21
  • Slide 22
  • 21-24 Months Gross Motor (contd) Can kick ball without losing balance. Tosses or rolls large ball; can throw ball into a basket. Bends over to pick up toy without falling. Enjoys sitting on & moving small-wheeled riding toys. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson22
  • Slide 23
  • 21-24 Months Fine Motor May be showing hand preference. Unzips/zips large zippers. Eats with a fork. Places 4 stacking rings in any order. Towers 6-8 blocks. Browse through a book 1 page at a time. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson23
  • Slide 24
  • 21-24 Months Fine Motor (contd) Imitates horizontal stroke; scribbles spontaneously. Snips paper with scissors. Strings 1 bead with strong tip. Attempts to put on shoes & slippers. Attempts to open door by turning knob. Opens cabinets, drawers, boxes. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson24
  • Slide 25
  • 2 Years Physical Markers About 22 to 38 lbs. (ave. 28 lbs.) Height is about total height the child will attain as an adult about 32 to 38 tall. Approx. first 16 teeth have appeared. Vision fully developed. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson25
  • Slide 26
  • 25-30 Months (22 Years) 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson26
  • Slide 27
  • 25- 30 Months Cognitive Represent reality to themselves through use of symbols, mental images, words, gestures. Objects & events no longer have to be present to be thought about. Often fail to distinguish their point of view from others. Easily captured by surface appearances. Often confused about causal relations. The above points last until about 6 years old. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson27
  • Slide 28
  • 25- 30 Months Cognitive (contd) Can see how things are same or different. Matches objects; matches 4 colors. Identifies objects by their use. Recalls geometric shapes. Completes 3-6 piece inset puzzle. Understands the concept of one, then two. Engages in simple make-believe play. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson28
  • Slide 29
  • 25- 30 Months Cognitive (contd) Can pay attention to only one thing at a time. Represents/recalls events less frequently experienced or observed, particularly impressive or traumatic events. Plays doctor, store, shopping, teacher, mom/dad, child. Roles shift quickly; events still short & isolated. Realistic props required. Matches object to a picture in a book. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson29
  • Slide 30
  • 25- 30 Months Cognitive (contd) Curious what things are, what they do, how they work. Begins making mechanical toys work. Expands knowledge or shape/color. Knows spatial concepts such as in, on, under, up/down. Notices what comes first, next, last when routines are followed; doesnt like changes in schedule confusing. Knows mostly where things are located in and around house. Begins to reason from one situation to another similar situation. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson30
  • Slide 31
  • 25-30 Months (2- 2 Years) Language Names 5 pictures. Recognizes action in pictures. Begins to use pronouns (I, you, me, we, they). Says me, mine, no a lot. May use action words such as go, run, look, eat. Begins to understand many sentences. Combines 3-4 words. Uses 50+ words. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson31
  • Slide 32
  • 25-30 Months (2- 2 Years) Language (contd) May be able to identify friend by naming. Speaks clearly most of the time. Uses plurals and pronouns. Identifies objects or pictures by use. Asks a question using inflection. Gets excited about books, songs, & conversation. May repeat numbers but cant count. Knows descriptive words such as big, happy 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson32
  • Slide 33
  • 25-30 Months (2- 2 Years) Language (contd) Asks why, what, where questions. Responds appropriately to why questions regarding routine activities. Can tell 2-3 sentences about an activity. Can use 2 adjectives. Knows name, age, gender. Names 6-8 body parts. Conversational. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson33
  • Slide 34
  • 25-30 Months (2- 2 Years) Social-Emotional Pretends to be engaged in familiar activities or other events using toys as props. May help with simple household tasks. Imitates adults & peers. Fears include: loud noises, animals, dark rooms, separation from parent, large objects/machines, change in personal environment. Shows affection. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson34
  • Slide 35
  • 25-30 Months (2- 2 Years) Social-Emotional (contd) Greets familiar adults spontaneously. Readily expresses wide range of emotion Quick mood changes. Sense of self; positive or negative self-worth. Periods of strong independence; often stubborn, bossy, wants own way. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson35
  • Slide 36
  • 25-30 Months (2- 2 Years) Social-Emotional (contd) Playing more with other children. May poke, push, pull in awkward attempt to make friends. Waits his/her turn. Sometimes shares toys with others when prompted. Starts to understand mine vs. his/hers or yours. Doesnt understand others have feelings. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson36
  • Slide 37
  • 25-30 Months (2- 2 Years) Gross Motor Runs easily. Stands/walks on tiptoes. Stands on one foot momentarily without assistance. Throws a ball 5 feet with direction. Jumps off the ground; may jump broadly (across). Walks up/down stairs alone, first placing both feet on each step with minimal assistance, then in a step-to- step manner without assistance. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson37
  • Slide 38
  • 25-30 Months (2- 2 Years) Gross Motor (contd) Demonstrates overall coordination and balancing. Stoops, squats, bends over to pick up something without falling. Walks 2+ steps on a line alternating feet. Pedaling. Climbs well; may need help getting down. Likes rough & tumble play. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson38
  • Slide 39
  • 25-30 Months (2- 2 Years) Fine Motor Feeds self independently with utensils with little spilling. Drinks from cup, eventually with one hand. Takes off clothes; puts on simple clothing without help. Washes/dries hands and brushes teeth with minimal assistance. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson39
  • Slide 40
  • 25-30 Months (2- 2 Years) Fine Motor (contd) Separates 4 snap beads. Builds tower of 3-4 then up to 9 blocks. Removes cap from bottle; screws/unscrews jar lids, nuts, bolts. Turns rotating handles. Turns 1-3 pages of paper book. Draws 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson40
  • Slide 41
  • 31-36 Months (2 -3 Years) 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson41
  • Slide 42
  • 31-36 Months (2 - 3 Years) Cognition Engages in functional play simple, repetitive activities. Gender identity develops. Begins to understand big & little; relationship between part & whole (door of car, nose of animal). Selects toy hidden in correct hand when put behind back. Points/names a color; may recognize 3 colors. Matches 3 shapes; stacks 4-5 rings in order. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson42
  • Slide 43
  • 31-36 Months (2 - 3 Years) Cognition (contd) Counts 3 objects. Completes simple puzzles. Makes mechanical toys work. Continues pretend activities. Play starts having a sequence; sequences evolve and are not planned; events are not isolated. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson43
  • Slide 44
  • 31-36 Months (2 - 3 Years) Cognition (contd) Compensatory stories: re-enactment of experiences, events with new outcomes. Associative play: loosely organized around a common activity, shared interests & materials. Reasons from effect back to cause. Understands before, after, now, soon, later Expanding attention span up to about 10 min. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson44
  • Slide 45
  • 31-36 Months (2 - 3 Years) Language Very talkative. Vocabulary of many hundreds of words (200-800). Speech is more accurate; may still leave off ending sounds, stumble or stutter when trying to express self. Recognizes/identifies most common objects & pictures. Understands most sentences. Uses 3-5 word phrases/sentences consistently. Answers what, where, or yes/no questions. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson45
  • Slide 46
  • 31-36 Months (2 - 3 Years) Language (contd) Distinguishes on, in, under, big, little. Starts using past tense, referring to future. Listens attentively to stories & books but doesnt like if you skip or change a word. Uses words differently at different times. Repeats words and sounds. Uses words to express fears and insecurities by telling others dont look, dont laugh, etc. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson46
  • Slide 47
  • 31-36 Months (2 - 3 Years) Social-Emotional Similar fears as 2 - 2 ; some decrease in separation anxiety; fears imaginary things, unusual or dramatic appearances in other people. Begins to develop real friendships; may develop imaginary friend. Increasingly likes having peers and other adults around. Separates easily from caregiver in familiar surroundings. Imitates behavior of others. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson47
  • Slide 48
  • 31-36 Months (2 - 3 Years) Social-Emotional (contd) Demonstrates increasing independence; defiant behavior. Follows simple rules, suggestions. Makes simple choices. Enjoys playing alone, but near other children. Can play cooperatively for short periods. Shares & take turns sometimes, but still does not cooperate well. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson48
  • Slide 49
  • 31-36 Months (2 - 3 Years) Social-Emotional (contd) Participates in circle games. Acts out social encounters through play activities. Expresses wide range of emotions. Objects to minor changes in routines. Realizes own skills. Acts to please adults. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson49
  • Slide 50
  • 31-36 Months (2 - 3 Years) Social-Emotional (contd) Helps others. Seeks assistance. Directs others. Enjoys making others laugh and being silly. Spends a great deal of time watching & observing. Enjoys hearing stories about self & playing house. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson50
  • Slide 51
  • 31-36 Months (2 - 3 Years) Gross Motor Throws ball overhand; catches a large ball. Jumps over a line. Ascends/descends stairs alternating feet without help. May swing leg to kick ball; more accurate kicking. Rides on tricycle using pedals. Can briefly balance and hop on one foot. Enjoys fast moving activities. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson51
  • Slide 52
  • 31-36 Months (2 - 3 Years) Fine Motor Holds pencil in writing position. Scribbles spontaneously. Makes or copies lines & circles with pencil/crayon. Turns one page at a time. Builds 3 block bridge with demonstration. Might use one hand more frequently than another. Undoes some buttons, laces, zippers. Cuts across 6 piece of paper with scissors. Easily places small objects in a small opening. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson52
  • Slide 53
  • 3 Years Physical Markers Gained about 4-5 lbs. and grown about 2-3 in last year. About 25 to 44 lbs. and 34 to 43. Develops taller, leaner appearance. Has all 20 primary teeth. Sleeps 10-12 hours per night plus daytime nap. 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson53
  • Slide 54
  • Toilet Learning 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson54
  • Slide 55
  • Toilet Learning About 18-20 mos. - Indicates discomfort over soiled diapers verbally or with gestures. About 2 yrs. - May be psychologically ready for toilet learning. Begins to gain some control of bowels & bladder. About 28 mo. - Indicates need to use the bathroom. About 33 mo. - Distinguishes urination & bowel movements. About 3 yrs. - May have daytime & possibly nighttime control over bowel & bladder functions. About 36-38 mos. - May have full control, use toilet on own. Boys often do not complete toilet learning until 3 (42 mo.). 11.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson55
  • Slide 56
  • Wrap-up Questions Discussion In-service evaluation Follow-up Next session Nov. 25: Early brain development, learning, and mental health 5611.18.08 Infant-Toddler 4, D. Richardson
  • Slide 57
  • References 57 In addition to the provided resource materials listed on the in-service agenda, various textbooks and other reference materials used for this presentation are available upon request. 11.13.2008 Infant-Toddler Dev 3, D. Richardson