Developmental milestones

Developmental milestones

The first years of development are crucial for lifelong learning and development. Developmental milestones are actions that most children can do by a certain age. Milestones follow predictable courses in infants and children, and later, developmental skills build on previous ones achieved. Understanding normal development can help recognize delayed development. Children with global developmental delays have delays in multiple domains of development, while children with specific delays may have a delay in only one area of development, such as language or motor skills (Scharf et al., 2006).

Examples of important developmental milestones

Milestones at 1 month

Movement milestones

  • Makes jerky, quivering arm thrusts
  • Brings hands within range of eyes and mouth
  • Moves the head from side to side while lying on the stomach
  • Keeps hands in tight fists
  • Develops strong reflex movements

Visual and hearing milestones

  • Focuses 8–12 inches (20.3–30.4 cm) away
  • Eyes wander and occasionally cross
  • Prefers black-and-white or high-contrast patterns
  • Prefers the human face to all other patterns
  • Hearing is fully mature
  • Recognizes some sounds
  • May turn towards familiar sounds and voices

Communication milestone

  • Cries to express needs (hunger or discomfort)
  • Makes small cooing and gurgling sounds
  • Calms down when swaddled

Milestones at 3 months

Movement milestones

  • Raises head and chest when lying on the stomach
  • Supports the upper body with arms when lying on the stomach
  • Stretches legs out and kicks when lying on the stomach or back
  • Opens and shuts hands
  • Pushes down on legs when feet are placed on a firm surface
  • Brings hand to mouth
  • Takes swipes at dangling objects with hands
  • Grasps and shakes hand toys

Visual and hearing milestones

  • Watches faces intently
  • Follows moving objects
  • Recognizes familiar objects and people at a distance
  • Starts using hands and eyes in coordination
  • Smiles at the sound of your voice
  • Begins to babble
  • Begins to imitate some sounds
  • Turns head towards direction of sound

Social and emotional milestones

  • Begins to develop a social smile
  • Enjoys playing with other people and may cry when playing stops
  • Becomes more communicative and expressive with face and body
  • Imitates some movements and facial expressions

Milestones at 7 months

Movement milestones

  • Rolls both ways (front to back and back to front)
  • Sits with and then without the support of its hands
  • Supports its whole weight on its legs
  • Reaches with one hand
  • Transfers objects from hand to hand
  • Uses raking grasp (not pincer)

Visual milestones

  • Develops full colour vision
  • Experiences enhanced distance vision
  • Experiences improvement in the ability to track moving objects

Language milestones

  • Responds to own name
  • Begins to respond to ‘no’
  • Distinguishes emotions by tone of voice
  • Responds to sounds by making sounds
  • Uses voice to express joy and displeasure
  • Babbles chains of consonants

Cognitive milestones

  • Finds partially hidden object
  • Explores with hands and mouth
  • Struggles to get objects that are out of reach

Social and emotional milestones

  • Enjoys social play
  • Gets interested in mirror images
  • Responds to other people’s expressions of emotion and appears joyful often

Milestones at 1 year

Movement milestones

  • Gets to sitting position without assistance
  • Crawls forward on belly by pulling with arms and pushing with legs
  • Assumes hands-and-knees position
  • Creeps on hands and knees supporting trunk on hands and knees
  • Gets from sitting to crawling or prone (lying on stomach) position
  • Pulls self up to stand
  • Walks holding on to furniture
  • Stands momentarily without support
  • May walk two or three steps without support
  • Milestones in hand and finger skills
  • Uses pincer grasp
  • Bangs two cubes together
  • Puts objects into container
  • Takes objects out of container
  • Lets objects go voluntarily
  • Pokes with index finger
  • Tries to imitate scribbling

Language milestones

  • Pays increasing attention to speech
  • Responds to simple verbal requests
  • Responds to ‘no’
  • Uses simple gestures, such as shaking head for ‘no’
  • Babbles with inflection
  • Says ‘Dada’ and ‘Mama’
  • Uses exclamations, such as ‘oh-oh!’
  • Tries to imitate words

Cognitive milestones

  • Explores objects in many different ways (shaking, banging, throwing and dropping)
  • Finds hidden objects easily
  • Looks at correct picture when the image is named
  • Imitates gestures
  • Begins to use objects correctly (drinking from cup, brushing hair, dialling phone and listening to receiver)

Social and emotional milestones

  • Becomes shy or anxious with strangers
  • Cries when mother or father leaves
  • Enjoys imitating people in play
  • Shows specific preferences for certain people and toys
  • Tests parental responses to his actions during feedings (What do you do when he refuses food?)
  • Tests parental responses to its behaviour (What do you do if he cries after you leave the room?)
  • May be fearful in some situations
  • Prefers mother and/or regular caregiver over all others
  • Repeats sounds or gestures for attention
  • Finger-feeds himself
  • Extends arm or leg to help when being dressed

Milestones at 2 years

Movement milestones

  • Walks alone
  • Pulls toys behind it while walking
  • Carries a large toy or several toys while walking
  • Begins to run
  • Stands on tiptoe
  • Kicks a ball
  • Climbs onto and down from furniture unassisted
  • Walks up and down stairs, holding on to support
  • Achieves milestones in hand and finger skills
  • Scribbles spontaneously
  • Turns over container to pour out contents
  • Builds tower of four blocks or more
  • Might use one hand more frequently than the other

Language milestones

  • Points to an object or picture when it is named for him
  • Recognizes names of familiar people, objects and body parts
  • Says several single words (by 15–18 months)
  • Uses simple phrases (by 18–24 months)
  • Uses two- to four-word sentences
  • Follows simple instructions
  • Repeats words overheard in conversation

Cognitive milestones

  • Finds objects even when hidden under two or three covers
  • Begins to sort by shapes and colours
  • Begins make-believe play

Social and emotional milestones

  • Imitates behaviour of others, especially adults and older children
  • Increasingly aware of itself as separate from others
  • Increasingly enthusiastic about company of other children
  • Demonstrates increasing independence
  • Begins to show defiant behaviour
  • Increasing episodes of separation anxiety toward midyear, then they fade

Milestones at 4 years

Movement milestones

  • Hops and stands on one foot for up to five seconds
  • Goes upstairs and downstairs without support
  • Kicks ball forward
  • Throws ball overhand
  • Catches bounced ball most of the time
  • Moves forward and backward with agility
  • Milestones in hand and finger skills
  • Copies square shapes
  • Draws a person with two to four body parts
  • Uses scissors
  • Draws circles and squares
  • Begins to copy some capital letters

Language milestones

  • Understands the concepts of ‘same’ and ‘different’
  • Has mastered some basic rules of grammar
  • Speaks in sentences of five to six words
  • Speaks clearly enough for strangers to understand
  • Tells stories

Cognitive milestones

  • Correctly names some colours
  • Understands the concept of counting and may know a few numbers
  • Approaches problems from a single point of view
  • Begins to have a clearer sense of time
  • Follows three-part commands
  • Recalls parts of a story
  • Understands the concept of same/different
  • Engages in fantasy play

Social and emotional milestones

  • Interested in new experiences
  • Cooperates with other children
  • Plays ‘Mom’ or ‘Dad’
  • Becomes increasingly inventive in fantasy play
  • Dresses and undresses
  • Negotiates solutions to conflicts
  • Becomes more independent
  • Imagines that many unfamiliar images may be ‘monsters’
  • Views self as a whole person involving body, mind and feelings
  • Often cannot distinguish between fantasy and reality

Milestones at 5 years

Movement milestones

  • Stands on one foot for 10 seconds or longer
  • Hops and somersaults
  • Swings and climbs
  • May be able to skip
  • Milestones in hand and finger skills
  • Copies triangle and other geometric patterns
  • Draws person with body
  • Prints some letters
  • Dresses and undresses without assistance
  • Uses fork, spoon and (sometimes) a table knife
  • Usually cares for own toilet needs

Language milestones

  • Recalls part of a story
  • Speaks sentences of more than five words
  • Uses future tense
  • Tells longer stories
  • Says name and address

Cognitive milestones

  • Can count 10 or more objects
  • Correctly names at least four colours
  • Better understands the concept of time
  • Knows about things used every day in the home (money, food and appliances)

Social and emotional milestones

  • Wants to please friends
  • Wants to be like her friends
  • Is more likely to agree to rules
  • Likes to sing, dance and act
  • Shows more independence and may even visit a next-door neighbour by herself
  • Becomes aware of sexuality
  • Is able to distinguish fantasy from reality
  • Becomes demanding sometimes and eagerly cooperative at other times

References

Child Mind Institute. Complete guide of developmental milestones. Based on American Academy of Pediatrics. https://childmind.org/guide/parents-guide-to-developmental-milestones/

Scharf, R. J., Scharf, G. J., & Stroustrup, A. (2016). Developmental milestones. Pediatrics in review, 37(1), 25-38.

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Developing child

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