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Important Developmental Mile Stones
  • 3 Months
  • 7 Months
  • 1 Year
  • 2 Years
  • 3 Years
  • 4 Years
  • 5 Years
  • Important Milestones: By the End of 7 Months

    Babies develop at their own pace, so it's impossible to tell exactly when your child will learn a given skill. The developmental milestones listed below will give you a general idea of the changes you can expect, but don't be alarmed if your own baby's development takes a slightly different course.

    Social and Emotional

  • Enjoys social play


  • Interested in mirror images


  • Responds to other people's expressions of emotion and appears joyful often
  • Cognitive

  • Finds partially hidden object


  • Explores with hands and mouth


  • Struggles to get objects that are out of reach
  • Language

  • Responds to own name


  • Begins to respond to "no"


  • Can tell emotions by tone of voice


  • Responds to sound by making sounds


  • Uses voice to express joy and displeasure


  • Babbles chains of sounds
  • Movement

  • Rolls both ways (front to back, back to front)


  • Sits with, and then without, support on hands


  • Supports whole weight on legs


  • Reaches with one hand


  • Transfers object from hand to hand


  • Uses hand to rake objects
  • Vision

  • Develops full color vision


  • Distance vision matures


  • Ability to track moving objects improves
  • Developmental Health Watch

    Alert your child's doctor or nurse if your child displays any of the following signs of possible developmental delay for this age range.

  • Seems very stiff, with tight muscles


  • Seems very floppy, like a rag doll


  • Head still flops back when body is pulled to a sitting position


  • Reaches with one hand only


  • Refuses to cuddle


  • Shows no affection for the person who cares for him or her


  • Doesn't seem to enjoy being around people


  • One or both eyes consistently turn in or out


  • Persistent tearing, eye drainage, or sensitivity to light


  • Does not respond to sounds around him or her


  • Has difficulty getting objects to mouth


  • Does not turn head to locate sounds by 4 months


  • Does not roll over in either direction (front to back or back to front) by 5 months


  • Seems impossible to comfort at night after 5 months


  • Does not smile on his or her own by 5 months


  • Cannot sit with help by 6 months


  • Does not laugh or make squealing sounds by 6 months


  • Does not actively reach for objects by 6 to 7 months


  • Does not follow objects with both eyes at near (1 foot) and far (6 feet) ranges by 7 months


  • Does not bear weight on legs by 7 months


  • Does not try to attract attention through actions by 7 months


  • Does not babble by 8 months


  • Shows no interest in games of peek-a-boo by 8 months


  • Experiences a dramatic loss of skills he or she once
  • Content source: National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities,CDC Act Early Informational Material,From CARING FOR YOUR BABY AND YOUNG CHILD: BIRTH TO AGE 5 by Steven Shelov, Robert E. Hannermann, © 1991, 1993, 1998, 2004 by the American Academy of Pediatrics




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