Physical
Development
Intellectual
Development
Social & Emotional
Development
Basic
Facts
Grab
Bag
100

Newborns learn through these involuntary responses.

What are reflexes?

100

This theorist looked at intellectual development and first described the fixed order it happens in.

Who is Piaget?

100

This temperament describes an infant who adapts to change easily, is interested and responsive.

What is an easygoing temperament?

100

A child less than 1 year of age.

What is an infant?

100

In infant's brain gains weight by doing this.

What is becoming more complex?

200

Skills that require the use of muscles in the hands and fingers.

What are fine motor skills?

200

These sounds are the first ones imitated by infants.

What are vowel sounds?

200

The process of learning to recognize and express feelings.

What is emotional development?

200

This is an increase in size or weight.

What is growth?

200

These require the use and control of muscles.

What are motor skills?

300

These foods help foster independence in infants.

What are finger foods?

300

In regards to language development, this happens before the ability to use the language.

What is understanding?

300

An infant's fear of unfamiliar people.

What is stranger anxiety?

300

Things that most children can do by a certain age.

What is a milestone?

300

Before eye-hand coordination develops, infant's use these broad swipes when reaching for objects.

What is raking?

400

Using the whole hand to grab an object.

What is the mitten grasp?

400

The only tasks an infant's brain is capable of performing, such as regulating heartbeat and controlling reflexes.

What are maintenance tasks?

400

This emotional accomplishment allows an infant to recognize those who care for them most.

What is forming an attachment?

400

During the first year of life, an infants weight does this.

What is triples?

400

This is the phasing out of breast or bottle feeding.

What is weaning?

500

An infant's ability to swallow depends on this reflex disappearing.

What is the tongue-protrusion reflex?

500

Attaining this milestone allows an infant to understand that things out of sight still exist.

What is object permanence?

500

This condition caused by unmet social and emotional needs causes an infant to lose interest in the world.

What is failure to thrive?

500

These are generalizations about development which happen in all babies, no matter where they're born.

What are principles of development?

500

In infant's, feelings are linked to these.  Examples include hunger and discomfort.

What are physical sensations?