Resultado de búsqueda
Skills such as taking a first step, smiling for the first time, and waving “bye bye” are called developmental milestones. Children reach milestones in how they play, learn, speak, act, and move. Click on the age of your child to see the milestones: 2 months. 4 months. 6 months. 9 months. 1 year.
- Learn the Signs Home
Use CDC’s “Learn the Signs. Act Early.” tools to track and...
- Milestones
Developmental milestones are things most children (75% or...
- Digital Online Checklist
Skills such as taking a first step, smiling for the first...
- If You’re Concerned
Talk to Your Child’s Doctor. As a parent, you know your...
- Free Materials
CDC’s “Learn the Signs. Act Early.” has FREE research-based,...
- Families
CDC’s Milestone Tracker App – now available in Spanish!...
- Healthcare Providers
CDC’s Learn the Signs.Act Early. materials include...
- Early Childhood Educators
Links with this icon indicate that you are leaving the CDC...
- Learn the Signs Home
Learn what most children can do by 3 years in social, emotional, language, cognitive, and movement areas. Check the milestones with CDC's free app, online tool, or printable checklist and get tips and activities to help your child's development.
Learn what most children can do by 2 years in social, emotional, language, cognitive, and movement areas. Find tips and activities to help your child's development and a free checklist app or online tool.
Use this map of milestones to know what to look for along the way. Developmental milestones adapted from Caring for Your Baby and Young Child: Birth to Age 5 (AAP, 2009) and Bright Futures: Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children, and Adolescents (AAP, 2008). Learn the signs.
informed milestones to include in CDC checklists, clarify when most children can be expected to reach a milestone (to discourage a wait-and-see approach), and support clinical judgment regarding screening between recommended ages.
8 de feb. de 2022 · Review and revision of CDC’s developmental surveillance milestones and tools by subject matter experts using newly defined criteria and empirically informed evidence.
Learn how the CDC's free milestone checklists can help clinicians and families monitor and promote children's development from two months to five years of age. The checklists were recently revised based on expert evaluation and normative data to reflect what most children would achieve.