child development Archives - °µÍřAV Family Care Where Family Comes First Sat, 30 Aug 2025 23:28:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 /wp-content/uploads/2017/08/cropped-hearts-for-favicon-32x32.png child development Archives - °µÍřAV Family Care 32 32 Setting Meaningful Goals for Children: A Guide for Parents and Nannies /blog/setting-meaningful-goals-for-children-a-guide-for-parents-and-nannies/ Tue, 23 Sep 2025 11:22:00 +0000 /?p=13880 Children thrive when they have structure, encouragement, and opportunities to grow. Whether you’re a parent or a nanny, setting thoughtful goals for children helps foster confidence, independence, and emotional well-being. But goals should look different depending on a child’s age and stage of development. Here’s how to approach goal-setting for infants, toddlers, and school-age children—with…

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Children thrive when they have structure, encouragement, and opportunities to grow. Whether you’re a parent or a nanny, setting thoughtful goals for children helps foster confidence, independence, and emotional well-being. But goals should look different depending on a child’s age and stage of development.

Here’s how to approach goal-setting for infants, toddlers, and school-age children—with practical examples and tips to support their growth.

Infants (0–12 Months): Building Trust and Foundations

At this stage, goals are centered around emotional security, sensory exploration, and physical development. Infants learn through repetition, routine, and responsive care.

Focus Areas:

  • Establishing consistent sleep and feeding routines
  • Encouraging tummy time to build strength
  • Responding to cues to build trust and attachment
  • Introducing simple sensory experiences (textures, sounds, colors)

Tips for Caregivers:

  • Narrate daily activities to build language exposure
  • Track milestones gently—every child develops at their own pace
  • Celebrate small achievements like rolling over or grasping toys

Toddlers (1–3 Years): Encouraging Independence and Curiosity

Toddlers are eager to explore and assert themselves. Goals should support their growing autonomy while reinforcing boundaries and emotional regulation.

Focus Areas:

  • Practicing self-help skills (washing hands, feeding themselves)
  • Expanding vocabulary through books and conversation
  • Learning to follow simple instructions and routines
  • Naming and expressing emotions

Tips for Caregivers:

  • Offer choices to build decision-making skills
  • Use positive reinforcement to encourage cooperation
  • Create safe spaces for exploration and play

Preschool & Early School Age (4–8 Years): Building Skills and Confidence

Children in this age group begin to develop academic readiness, social awareness, and problem-solving abilities. Goals should balance structure with creativity.

Focus Areas:

  • Strengthening fine motor skills (writing, cutting, drawing)
  • Practicing early literacy and numeracy
  • Developing empathy and teamwork through play
  • Setting simple personal goals (e.g., “I want to learn to tie my shoes”)

Tips for Caregivers:

  • Encourage reflection: “What did you enjoy today?”
  • Use visual charts or journals to track progress
  • Support resilience by helping children navigate setbacks

Goal-setting isn’t about pressure—it’s about creating opportunities for children to grow in ways that feel meaningful and achievable. When parents and nannies work together to support development, children benefit from consistency, encouragement, and a shared sense of purpose.

At °µÍřAV Family Care, we believe in nurturing the whole child. Whether you’re guiding a baby through their first milestones or helping a school-age child build confidence, your role matters deeply. Let’s keep growing—together.

The professionals at °µÍřAV Family Care personally assist nannies, babysitters and families in St. Louis, Atlanta, Chicago, Nashville, Memphis, Charlotte, Miami and Orlando to find the right childcare arrangement. Our mission is to provide a safe and personalized  approach for families and caregivers to connect with each other that is not an internet search. °µÍřAV has worked with families, nannies, sitters, newborn care providers, and tutors for over 40 years and looks forward to working with you! To find great nanny and babysitting jobs visit us at tlc@tlcforkids.com or Call 314-725-5660.

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Is Make-Believe Healthy? /blog/is-make-believe-healthy/ Tue, 12 Apr 2022 11:24:34 +0000 /?p=7747 Young children take life literally. They view all situations as “good” or “bad.” Water is either “hot” or “cold.” Young children do not assign “degrees” to any situation, and in the young child’s world, everything is real. The three-year-old has absolutely no doubt that Sponge Bob or Dora the Explorer really exists. These characters are…

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Young children take life literally. They view all situations as “good” or “bad.” Water is either “hot” or “cold.” Young children do not assign “degrees” to any situation, and in the young child’s world, everything is real. The three-year-old has absolutely no doubt that Sponge Bob or Dora the Explorer really exists. These characters are just as “real” to the child as Mommy and Daddy. Santa can circle the globe and visit every child on the planet in a single night and the Easter Bunny can deliver baskets of colored eggs just like Daddy can make the car go and Mommy can make food magically appear. 

In my opinion, make-believe is not only healthy, it is essential. Make believe helps a child to make sense of the world around him. He assigns his perceptions of a person, place, or thing with the help of make-believe.

There are those who advocate removing all make-believe from childhood. These experts tell us that make believe causes children to delay their perception of their reality. Shame on them! Too much “reality” isn’t good for adults much less little kids.

Grown-ups attend movies and plays and get caught up in the action on the screen or on the stage. Just for a moment, they believe what they are seeing and hearing. Adults, of course, can separate fact from fiction and fantasy from reality. Kids will learn to make those distinctions as they grow older. Meanwhile, that fantasy is helping them learn how to deal with life in a safe and nonthreatening way.

As long as the make-believe is healthy and doesn’t desensitize the child (make killing seem good and evil seem desirable), I see no harm in make-believe.

 

The professionals at °µÍřAV Family Care personally assist nannies, babysitters and families in St. Louis, Atlanta, Chicago, Nashville, Memphis, Charlotte, Miami and Orlando to find the right childcare arrangement. Our mission is to provide a safe and personalized  approach for families and caregivers to connect with each other that is not an internet search. °µÍřAV has worked with families, nannies, sitters, newborn care providers, and tutors for over 35 years and looks forward to working with you! To find great nanny and babysitting jobs visit us at tlc@tlcforkids.com or Call 314-725-5660.

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