New First Three Years of Life: Completely Revised and Updated
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About this ebook
First published in 1975, The First Three Years of Life became an instant classic. Based on Burton White's thirty-seven years of observation and research, this detailed guide to the month-by-month mental, physical, social, and emotional development of infants and toddlers has supported and guided hundreds of thousands of parents. Now completely revised and updated, it contains the most accurate information and advice available on raising and nurturing the very young child. White gives parents real-world-tested advice on:
* Creating a stimulating environment for your infant and toddler
* Using effective, age-appropriate discipline techniques
* How to handle sleep problems
* What toys you should (and should not) buy
* How to encourage healthy social development
* How and when to toilet-train
No parent who cares about a child's well-being can afford to be without this book.
Burton L. White
Burton L. White is the author of Haga Feliz a su Bebe...Pero No Lo Consienta (Raising a Happy, Unspoiled Child), a Simon & Schuster book.
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New First Three Years of Life - Burton L. White
THE NEW FIRST THREE YEARS OF LIFE
The Completely Revised and Updated Edition of the Parenting Classic
BURTON L. WHITE
BARBARA MARKS
FIRESIDE
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FIRESIDE
Rockefeller Center
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New York, NY 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com
Copyright © 1985, 1990, 1995 by Burton L. White Associates, Inc.
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
FIRESIDE and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster Inc.
DESIGNED BY BARBARA MARKS
Manufactured in the United States of America
20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
White, Burton L., 1929—
The new first three years of life/ Burton L. White.
p. cm.
The completely revised and updated edition of the parenting classic.
Rev. ed. of: The first three years of life. New and rev. ed. c1990.
Includes index.
1. Infant psychology. I. White, Burton L., 1929—First three years of life. II.Title.
BF719.5W45 1995
649’.22—dc20 95-18297
CIP
ISBN 0-684-80419-0
ISBN: 978-0-684-80419-4
eISBN: 978-1-439-12419-2
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Throughout my thirty-seven-year research career, I have always had help from others. As the years went by the numbers have grown to thousands of people. I have never, however, formally acknowledged my gratitude for one other kind of essential assistance. Brandeis, MIT, and Harvard have provided the bases that made my research possible over more than twenty years.
In 1976 I represented the United States at meetings of UNESCO. It was quite clear that no other country has ever supported research on the development of children to anywhere near the extent that this country has.
To each of these institutions I am deeply grateful.
To the memory of a wonderful young man, Mark Howard Berman
CONTENTS
Preface
SECTION I: THE SEVEN PHASES OF THE FIRST THREE YEARS OF LIFE
1 Birth to Eight Months: Guidelines for Phases I to V
2 Phase I: Birth to Six Weeks
3 Phase II: Six to Fourteen Weeks
4 Phase III: Three and a Half to Five and a Half Months
5 Phase IV: Five and a Half to Eight Months
6 Phase V: Eight to Fourteen Months
7 Phase VI: Fourteen to Twenty-four Months
8 Phase VII: Twenty-four to Thirty-six Months
9 An Overview of Educational Developments During the First Three Years of Life
SECTION II: TOPICS RELATED TO CHILD REARING DURING THE FIRST THREE YEARS OF LIFE
Introduction
Part I: Major Issues
• Avoidance of Spoiling
• Sibling Rivalry
• Discipline
• Hearing Ability
• Developmental Difficulties
• Breast-Feeding
• Substitute Child Care
• Onset of Early Behaviors
• Play
• Toys 293
• Nature Versus Nurture
• Older First-Time Mothers
Part II: Other Issues
• Programs That Promise Precocity
• Teaching Infants to Swim
• The Role of the Father
• Bonding
• Play Groups
• The Bilingual Home
• How Amazing Is the Newborn?
• Toilet Training
• Professional Services
• After the Third Year
• Nursery School
Concluding Remarks
• How Tough It Is to Know
• A Hot Potato
• The Toughest Parts of the Job
• New Parents as Teachers
Recommended Readings
Index 370
PREFACE
The first edition of this book was written in 1974 and published in 1975. This fourth edition has been completely rewritten to reflect my best understanding of development during the first three years of life. I was delighted to be able to bring this book up to date, and as I expected, writing it has been a labor of love. You see, after all these years of research, thirty-eight to be exact, I am still convinced that no subject is more important than the quality of people, and that what happens during a child’s first three years of life makes a unique and powerful contribution to the basic makeup of each new person. To add to all that, I have never lost my enjoyment of babies.
In spite of the revolutionary increase in interest since the 1960s in the events of the first years of life, this book remains the only one based directly on studies of children and parents in their own homes. It is also the only collection of ideas about raising children that has ever been tested (the Missouri New Parents as Teachers Project—1981-1985).
I am fortunate to have been able to conduct research and parent education work with thousands of normal families, visiting their homes on a monthly basis, usually over a period of more than two years. In this work I have been assisted by dozens of talented associates.
The work of the last six years has been particularly useful, as it has allowed me to examine very closely how effective our previous information is with new families just starting to raise children. In the operation of our New Parents as Teachers model program, my colleagues and I have been able to refine our previous views and also fill in many more details of the development and parenting process. For example, I have now concluded that helping a child acquire high level of intelligence and language is surprisingly easy to do in most instances. On the other hand, helping a child to become socially effective and a pleasure to live with has turned out to be considerably more difficult.
I have been enormously impressed with the link between loving but very firm parenting from the time a baby is seven to twenty-two months old, and the maintenance of happiness in a child.
It is very rewarding to be able to provide advice and support to new parents that regularly lead to the miracle of a beautifully developed two-year-old.
And here lies one of the important refinements that has emanated from our recent work. By the time a child reaches fourteen months of age, we have been able to determine whether that child is moving in a direction that augurs well for the first three years or is already well on the way to trouble. By the second birthday, the picture generally has become quite clear. By twenty-seven months of age, I believe it is now rather easy to see the signs that will lead to optimal readiness for school at six years of age or to substantial problems in respect to language, intelligence, and social behaviors.
The last thirty years or so have seen a steady growth of new and useful information about how a child begins to take shape during the first years of life. This information can help parents and their children make the most of the uniquely important early experiences. If you are about to raise your first child, you are in for one of life’s special pleasures. I hope this book will enhance the experience. Good luck.
SECTION I
THE SEVEN PHASES OF THE FIRST THREE YEARS OF LIFE
1
BIRTH TO EIGHT MONTHS: GUIDELINES FOR PHASES I TO V
GENERAL REMARKS
Why Separate the First Eight Months from the Balance of the First Three Years?
Reports from many parts of the world indicate that most children, even when raised under substandard conditions, do quite well educationally during their first eight months of life. Neither the child who will achieve superbly nor the one who will be seriously behind by the first grade seems to show any special qualities during the first year of life.*
In our work we have found that rearing children well becomes much more difficult once they begin to crawl. Another way of expressing this thought is that during the first eight months of life doing what comes naturally usually leads to very good results, but it is rarely enough to ensure the best results for the balance of the first three years.
During the first eight months of life a baby’s good development is largely ensured by nature. If parents do what comes naturally and provide a baby with generous amounts of love, attention, and physical care, nature will pretty much take care of the learning process. I do not mean to imply that it is impossible to do a bad job of child-rearing during this period; it is always possible, through stupidity or callousness, to do lasting harm to a child of any age, and especially during the first months of life. Nor do I mean to say that the normal
course of development during the first eight months of life cannot be improved upon. But it appears that nature, almost as if in anticipation of the uncertainties that beset new parents, has done its best to make the first six to eight months as problem-free as possible. There are, however, two significant hazards during this period that can lead to trouble. They are middle ear disease that interferes with hearing, and the overdevelopment of the demand cry.
I shall deal with both issues at length.
ESTABLISHING GOALS
If you are not clear about what you are trying to achieve, you have no way to determine whether or not you have succeeded. I have always found that spelling out goals and finding ways to assess to what degree they have been reached is the only starting point that makes sense.
What most parents want out of the early years is a well-developed child, along with a good deal of simple pleasure for both the child and themselves. They also want to avoid unhappiness, anxiety, and of course danger to the child. If optimal early development were incompatible with enjoyment for both the parents and the baby, it would be unfortunate. Happily, that is clearly not the case. Especially in the first months of life, the vast majority of child-rearing activities I’ll recommend will lead to both an involved, happy baby and a more contented parent. By the later stages of infancy and toddlerhood, I have found that the well-developing baby is by far the most pleasant to live with and the happiest.
General goals, however, are simply not enough. After you have decided you want a well-developed, happy child, then what? How do you achieve that goal? Indeed, what does it mean? Let’s look first at the goals for the first eight months of life.
We recommend that parents work toward three major goals during the first eight months of the baby’s life:
Giving the infant a feeling of being loved and cared for.
Helping her develop specific skills.
Encouraging her interest in the world around her.
As we follow the developing child from Phase I through Phase IV, I will refer repeatedly to these basic aims. Let us examine them more closely.
Giving Your Infant a Feeling of Being Loved and Cared For
During the first two years of life all children have a special need to form at least one strong attachment to an older person. Clearly, if a baby is to survive, let alone develop well, protection and nurturance must be available from the very beginning and for a long time thereafter.
During the first eight months of life, social development is comparatively simple. Erik Erikson, the famous personality theorist, called the primary social goal of this period the establishment of a sense oftrust.
I believe the term is an appropriate one. No requirement of good child-rearing is more natural or more rewarding than the tending of your baby in a loving and attentive way in order to establish a feeling of being loved and cared for, or a sense of basic trust. Although there is little reason to think that an infant of eight months has more than a simple awareness of his mother, most students of human development agree that the basic foundation of a child’s personality is being formed in his earliest interchanges with nurturing adults.
Helping Your Infant Develop Specific Skills
Few living creatures are as helpless as a newborn baby. At birth, an infant cannot think, use language, socialize with another human being, run, walk, or even deliberately move around. When on her back she can’t lift her head; on her stomach she can barely lift her nose off the surface on which she is lying. The list of things she cannot do is almost as long as the complete list of human abilities.
What can a newborn infant do? A newborn infant has a small number of reflexlike sensorimotor abilities. When placed on his stomach he can lift his head high enough to avoid suffocation when left with his nose in the mattress. With a little over two pounds of strength in each hand, he will grasp small objects with them, but only if someone else elicits the behavior in the correct manner. He may glance at and track an object for a few seconds if the object is large enough (more than a few inches in each dimension), contrasts well with the background, is no closer to him than six to eight inches and no farther away than approximately twenty-four inches, and is moving through his line of sight at or near a speed of about one foot per second. As soon as the target stops moving, however, he’ll lose interest in it. Moreover, he will behave this way only when he is awake, alert, and inactive, a condition that is likely to exist for only two or three minutes out of each waking hour during the first three weeks of life. In other circumstances you will see very few signs of interest in examining the outside world in those early days.
Newborns are also usually able to locate a small object touching them on or near the lips (rooting behavior), then grasp and suck it. They cry when they are uncomfortable. They blink when their eyes are touched or when they receive a puff of air. They respond with a knee jerk (the patellar response) when an appropriate stimulus is administered.
Of special interest is the baby’s startle reflex, which can be a source of needless concern to parents. A newborn will often startle if she is lowered through space abruptly, if she hears a loud noise nearby, or at times even when the light goes on in a dim room. These startles are most likely to occur when the baby is in a quiet rather than an active state. More dramatic, however, is the spontaneous startle, which, as the name implies, needs no external stimulus. During deep sleep, characterized by regular breathing and little or no movement, normal newborns will startle as frequently as every two minutes. During sleep states when the infant is slightly more active, spontaneous startles occur, but less regularly and less frequently. The more activity, the fewer the startles. Both kinds of behavior usually disappear by the end of the third month of life.
From about six weeks of age, a baby becomes increasingly able to deal with the world. From this time on, development proceeds rapidly. By the age of eight months, she has acquired a good deal of control over her body. She can hold her head erect and steady quite easily. She can turn over at will, can sit unaided, and may even be able to crawl across a room. Ordinarily she cannot as yet pull herself to a standing posture, walk, or climb,* but she is quite skillful at using her hands to reach for objects. About 99 of 100 babies have excellent, mature eyesight—better than their fathers’ if they are over forty-five years old. The infant can locate and discriminate sounds with admirable accuracy. Socially, she knows full well who her key people are and is likely to have become quite choosy about who picks her up and holds her close. As for intelligence, while she is a long way from being able to process or create ideas, she has acquired two important problem-solving skills: the ability to move an obstacle aside to get at something she wants to grasp, and even more important, the ability to use her cry to get someone to come to her.
This vigorous, extremely attractive young person has, in other words, acquired quite a number of basic skills.
Enjoyable and effective child-rearing during a baby’s first eight months is more likely when you know the normal pattern of emerging skills and how to provide opportunities for your baby to use them, I should point out, however, that most of these skills will evolve without any special effort from you. Apparently they are so basic that, except under extraordinarily poor conditions, normal development is assured. A more important reason for encouraging their use involves the third major goal for these first eight months of life.
Encouraging Your Baby’s Interest in the Outside World
Whether a child learns to reach for objects at three or four months rather than five or six is probably of no consequence. It has been my experience, however, that when very young infants are provided with an environment that offers them the opportunity to practice emerging skills, they become more interested in their environment, more alert and more cheerful. In fact, a basic principle of good child-rearing, especially during the first years, seems to be that you should design your child’s world so that his day is rich with options for activities that relate to his rapidly shifting interests and abilities. To create this environment successfully, you need detailed and accurate information as to what those interests and abilities are as the child grows. You will find much of that information in this book.
To sum up, then, during the first eight months of life, a baby should be reared in such a manner that she comes to feel she is deeply loved, that she acquires all the basic skills that can be acquired during those first months, and that her inborn tendency to learn more about and to enjoy the world around her is deepened and broadened.
*
There are exceptions to this statement. Approximately 15 percent of all children are either born with a significant handicap or acquire one during the first year of life. Also, there are undoubtedly many children born into nightmarish special situations who are considerably worse off Such exceptional cases are beyond the scope of this book.
*
Some babies develop much faster than others in these respects. I have seen babies crawl across a room and even pull themselves to a standing position at five months of age. Mercifully, this happens only in about one in five hundred instances. The subject of variability in developmental rates is quite important and I will deal with it at greater length further on.
2
PHASE I: BIRTH TO SIX WEEKS
GENERAL REMARKS
Helpless as a kitten
is a popular way of describing a newborn baby, but a kitten is considerably more able at birth than a human infant. If the newborn infant had to rely on his own abilities to find nourishment, he would not last long. The newborn baby seems to be only partially prepared for life outside of the womb, and the first four to six weeks of life seem more like a transitional period between two very different modes of existence than a time of rapid development. The new baby is oriented toward seeking comfort rather than exploring the world.
To begin with, life outside the womb depends upon the action of the lungs and several other systems that were not previously in use. In addition, for many infants the birth process itself is physically difficult. The typical extensive sleeping during the weeks after birth would seem to indicate that being born is an exhausting experience.
GENERAL BEHAVIOR DURING THE POSTNATAL PERIOD
Sleepiness and Irritability
Perhaps the most obvious quality babies show during the first weeks of life, aside from total dependence, is sleepiness. In the first postnatal days you can expect your baby to average about two to three minutes an hour of alertness during the day, and less at night. Such periods of wakefulness will lengthen gradually over the next month to an average of six or seven minutes an hour.
Even when your baby is awake, don’t expect a great deal of responsiveness to your loving overtures, or for that matter many signs of blissful contentment. On the contrary, the typical newborn is often rather irritable.* There is nothing personal going on yet. It’s not you. Give him nine or ten weeks and he will begin to give you smiles that will knock your socks off. You will just have to be patient for the time being.
Another term of relevance here is temperament,
that part of the personality that a baby brings with her at birth. Some sophisticated research has been performed on this subject under the direction of Herbert Birch of the Albert Einstein School of Medicine in New York. Popularized versions of the results of that work are available, notably Birch, Chess, and Thomas, Your Child Is a Person (New York: Bantam Books). The debate about how much of a three-year-old’s personality is innate and how much is learned has been around for a long time. In general, those who study temperament tend to emphasize innateness, whereas those who study child-rearing processes, like me, while acknowledging the importance of innate temperament, attribute the majority of the personality of the three-year-old to the effects of experience, especially those experiences that take place between seven or eight and twenty-four months of age.
Another interesting quality in the newborn’s behavior is rapid shifts in mood. Babies move from all-out rage to apparent contentment and vice versa very rapidly. That volatility will continue for the better part of the first year of life. Along with other signs, this volatility seems to suggest that you are not justified in assuming that a baby’s emotional life is like yours.
The Fragmented Nature of Infant Behavior
Another rather unusual aspect of the newborn’s behavior is its fragmented nature. Offer a six-month-old a small object and he will very probably look at it, then reach out and grasp it. He will then turn it this way and that and in all probability put it in his mouth and gum it for a while. He may then transfer it to his other hand. If you place it in his hand when he isn’t looking, he will quickly pay attention to it and begin to explore it in the aforementioned ways. Offer such an object to a newborn, however, and he is not even likely to notice it. You can get him to hold the object, provided you know how to unclench his usually fisted fingers. If you succeed, he will get a good grip on the object, but he won’t look at it. His grasp reflex operates in an isolated way during the first two months of life. Once he drops the object, don’t expect him to notice that it is gone and look for it. That kind of behavior is a long way off.
From an adult point of view, the behavior of a newborn in respect to a small object may seem puzzling. This behavior is convincingly explained, however, in Jean Piaget’s brilliant book, The Origins of Intelligence in Children (see Recommended Readings). According to Piaget, a baby’s behavior at birth consists mainly of a small number of somewhat clumsy, unfinished, isolated reflexes. These simple bits of behavior—rooting and sucking, grasping, occasionally glancing at nearby objects—are the foundation elements of all later intelligence. There is reason to believe that these behaviors are ancient fragments of what long ago made up useful, organized, instinctive patterns.
In a stunning analysis, documented by detailed descriptions of the evolving behavior of his own three children, Piaget mapped out the emergence of problem-solving and thinking ability in the first two years of life. But problem-solving is far beyond the capacity of the baby in Phase I. Her reflexes are triggered by internal and external stimuli of which she has no awareness. They operate briefly and mechanically and, as far as anyone can tell, are in no way deliberately controlled by her.
During Phase I an infant’s reflexes become more reliable and efficient through repeated triggering. In addition, the first signs of coordination among them begin as the baby brings her fist to her mouth increasingly often and gums or sucks it. In this manner, she grasps an object and occasionally brings it to her mouth and gums or sucks it. But let her drop that object and she will give no indication that she knows it exists. Out of hand (or mouth) is out of mind.
These early bits of behavior—the automatic grasping reflexes of the fingers and toes, the rooting responses of the mouth, the coordinated arm and leg movements—are perhaps best understood in the light of the behavior of simpler animals. In our parent education work we show an incredible film about the red kangaroo fetus. Long before its actual birth, the fetus leaves its mother’s uterus and passes through the cervical canal and out of its mother’s body. Then, totally unaided, it makes the arduous climb from the vaginal opening up the mother’s abdomen to the lip of the pouch. It then climbs over the lip and into the pouch, where it finds a nipple, grasps it in its mouth, and settles in for the balance of the fetal development period. Throughout this truly incredible journey, the mother provides no assistance, but merely sits quietly while licking her vaginal area, presumably clearing it of amniotic fluid and so forth. At this stage, the fetus is about one inch long, weighs less than one ounce, is blind, and has no use of its rear limbs. Of relevance to this discussion is the fact that the kangaroo fetus succeeds in its essential journey using the same reflexes present in the newborn human—that is, grasping, rooting, and coordinated limb and sucking reflexes. In the kangaroo, these reflexes function in an impressively orchestrated manner. In the human, they all operate, but in almost total isolation from one another. In place of this miraculous instinctive pattern, the human infant gets its nourishment and other needs mostly via the activities of the parent.
The wonderful work on the kangaroo surely helps us understand why the newborn human is endowed with certain reflexes. It also helps us understand something about the differences in applicability of the concept of instinctive behavior to humans as opposed to other animals. In general, fullfledged instinctive patterns such as those seen in the movements of the red kangaroo fetus, as well as in the web-spinning of spiders and nest-building of birds, and so forth, simply do not exist in humans at any stage of life. What does remain is what we call vestigial remnants and other contributions, especially in connection with the early attachment process. In this process the human infant forms its first social relationships to older people during the first two years of life. These evolutionary leftovers are also reminders that though human beings are unique both as a species and as individuals, we are clearly not totally different from other mammals.
Lack of Mobility
When on her back, a baby in Phase I cannot turn her torso so that she is lying on her side, nor can she otherwise move her body about, except under one condition. Some babies, when angry, manage to propel themselves the full length of the crib by repeatedly digging their heels into the mattress surface and thrusting out their legs. A soft bumper placed around the interior walls of the crib or bassinet is therefore mandatory. It should also be noted that even a newborn, when placed on a blanket on a floor or on some other surface without confining walls, may move quite a distance. Parents are well advised, because of this little-known capacity, to be watchful.
By four weeks of age the characteristic posture of a baby, when on his back, has become the tonic neck reflex (TNR) position, or the fencer’s pose,
with both hands fisted. About 90 percent of all babies spend about 85 percent of the time with their head turned to the far right. During the other 15 percent of the time the baby’s head is turned to the left. If you gently move her head from one position to the other, you will find that the arms and legs will move to the corresponding fencer’s pose. This automatic quality is typical of much of the infant’s behavior during the first three months of life. At birth, the TNR is not as obvious or well established. It becomes most noticeable during the four-to ten-week period, then recedes and disappears by four months of age.
Ordinarily, when a Phase I baby is placed on his stomach, he is only capable of barely clearing the mattress surface with his nose for a moment or two. Again, however, when angry he may do considerably better. It will be several months before a baby can cope well with his disproportionately large head. When he is propped up in a sitting position, his head will slump alarmingly. It is best always to provide head support for a Phase I baby, especially when lifting or holding him. Limited head control is one of several indications of weakness and fragility that all normal Phase I and Phase II babies show. All that changes with Phase III.
The tonic neck reflex (fencer’s pose
)
Hypersensitivity
In addition to being weak, sleepy, and irritable, the Phase I baby is likely to be unusually sensitive. This normal sensitivity can make a jumpy parent even more nervous, but it is perfectly natural for an infant to startle and cry at any abrupt change in stimulation during her first weeks of life. Sharp nearby noises, a jolt to the crib or infant seat, or a sudden change of position may trigger startling and crying, especially if the baby has been inactive. A second, less dramatic indication of sensitivity at this age is the infant’s avoidance of bright light. A Phase I infant will keep his eyes shut tightly in a brightly lit room or when exposed to direct sunlight. He is much more likely to open his eyes and look about when in a dimly lit environment. Another curious behavior during this stage is the doll’s-eye
effect. At times, a baby’s eyes will open when he is moved from a horizontal to a vertical position.
Smiling
You shouldn’t expect frequent full smiles during Phase I. New parents often report that they are a common occurrence. With reluctance I have to report that this is not usually the case. At times, a Phase I baby may show a clear smile, but that will happen just as often during sleep as when he is looking at another person. Vision skills and social awareness are simply too limited during the first weeks of life to enable an infant to examine nearby details and relate to people. We all would like to think that our children feel an immediate and deep love for us, but I don’t believe this is so. Toward the end of your baby’s first month, however, you may begin to see episodes of serious interest in your face. As babies move into the second month of life, the region of the face between the hairline and the nose becomes increasingly attractive to them.
The Visual Discovery of the Hand
The six-week-old baby, when placed on his back, will usually adopt the TNR position. Although he is now able to turn his head more freely than before, he rarely looks directly overhead. His hands, though still usually fisted, are now frequently held aloft. The hand on the side to which his head is turned is, from time to time, directly in his line of sight; but whether the hand is still or moving, the child does not seem to notice it. This situation can be quite disconcerting to a parent, because the baby appears to be blind. That is rarely the case. The Phase I baby is simply not yet able to see small nearby objects very well. His eyes do not yet converge or focus on such objects, and he is still not capable of clear three-dimensional vision.
Sometime after five or six weeks, if you look closely, you might notice your baby casting a brief glance at her hand as it moves through her line of sight. She may even do a double take, indicating that she has noticed something. Each day the tendency to look at her hand will become more stable, changing gradually into sustained hand regard. If she has a nearby object to touch—for example, something dangling from a crib or from a floor gym—you may notice her growing absorption with that toy rather than with her hand alone. Regular episodes of staring at the hand, either by itself or as it touches objects, is one common indication that your baby’s near vision is developing normally and that she is entering Phase II.
While hand-to-mouth activity is very common from the first days of life, regular episodes of eye-hand activity will emerge between six and ten weeks of age. This development represents the beginning of the process that will lead to the mastery of the hand as a tool for reaching out and grasping objects to be brought close for examination. Hand-eye behavior will challenge and absorb your child from its emergence on through at least his second birthday. Learning about the process step by step will be fascinating and very helpful to you in providing interesting activities for your child. It will also guide you in choosing appropriate toys. In addition, early visual activity is the way all babies begin to show their innate curiosity, a quality of great importance and one that should be nourished consistently throughout the first years of life.
APPARENT INTERESTS OF THE PHASE I INFANT
A rattle is probably the most common toy purchase for a newborn baby. Unfortunately, very young infants have no interest whatsoever in rattles. Nor do they pay any attention to stuffed animals—or to baseball gloves. During the first weeks of life babies are not interested in any aspect of the external environment. If you manage to get a Phase I baby to grasp a rattle, he will neither look at it nor transfer it to his other hand. After a few seconds he will drop it and show no sign that he has lost anything. In fact, don’t be surprised if, as he moves his arms about in a mostly uncontrolled manner, he hits himself on the nose or cheek with the rattle before he loses it. So if a rattle doesn’t interest a new baby, what does?
Simple Comfort
Any extensive observation of newborns leads one to the conclusion that what they seek is comfort, or at least the absence of discomfort. The newborn baby is easily and regularly discomforted. There is no way to prevent many such episodes. She is very likely to be restless and unhappy just before feedings. Normal babies often cry during and after feedings. They cry when their diapers are wet and cold, but interestingly they don’t seem to mind a wet and warm diaper. Any sudden change in stimulation that brings on a startle reaction is usually followed by crying. Put simply, newborns cry a lot. When they aren’t crying, they are usually sleeping. The message of the crying seems to be Please relieve my discomfort. I need my rest.
Note: the message is not I want to explore the world.
That comes later but, happily, not much later.
Being Handled and Moved Gently Through Space
People have known for years that one way to soothe the easily disgruntled newborn baby is to pick him up, hold him close, and rock him or walk with him. An automobile ride can work wonders for an infant when he seems inconsolable. Such experiences seem somehow to be so overpowerfully comforting or pleasurable to the Phase I infant that these activities can at least temporarily mask discomfort from many sources.
Sucking
As the Phase I child develops, she will have an increased capacity to get her fist to her mouth and keep it there. Whenever her fist or any similar object is at her mouth while she is awake, the baby is likely to suck. If you are patient you can get your baby to suck on a pacifier, especially in times of moderate distress. (A raging baby seems less interested and less able to suck a pacifier). Since sucking her hand is a very common activity in an infant of this age, we must assume it is very satisfying. In fact, at least throughout the first eight or nine months of life, all babies are very likely to put everything they can into their mouths and either gum it or bite down on it for a while. (This habit can be hazardous to a nursing mother, especially once her child acquires some teeth).
Looking
Toward the end of his first month of life, your baby will occasionally reveal some interest in looking at his environment. That interest will usually be brief and principally oriented toward the area one or two feet from his eyes. His incompletely developed vision will limit the show of interest. Nevertheless, curiosity, as indicated by visual exploration, will have made its appearance.
Three sights will absorb the baby’s budding visual interest: a mirror placed against the side of the crib at head level; a properly designed and located mobile featuring the top half of a face; and the general scene confronting him, viewed from an infant seat or when he is on his back. More details on providing what’s needed will follow.
LEARNING DEVELOPMENTS DURING PHASE I
During the first weeks of life, learning consists primarily of a stabilization of the unsteady, somewhat fragile pieces of behavior present at birth. These pieces of behavior were cited earlier in this chapter. For example, you will find that during the first weeks of life your baby becomes more skillful at finding and sucking the nipple, bringing her fist to her mouth and holding it there, and locating and tracking a slowly moving nearby object. In essence, the modest collection of simple reflexlike acts present at birth undergoes a gradual finishing process during the next six weeks.
Though Phase I is not characterized by dramatic learning, some discussion of the major areas of development may be useful, partly to indicate what a baby should not be expected to do.
Intelligence
Students of human development generally agree that babies do not begin life with any extensive intelligence and do not acquire any for several months at least. Definitions of intelligence vary widely, and judgments about when babies first reveal any such capacity will depend on the particular definition one chooses to use. One common definition of the earliest kind of intelligent behavior focuses on a simple problem-solving behavior. According to this view, well expressed by J. McVicker Hunt of the University of Illinois, the first sign of intelligence is evidenced when the baby intentionally pushes aside obstacles in order to get at desired objects. Such behavior is not often seen before a baby is six months old. Hunt’s interest in this kind of behavior came from his studies of Piaget’s research, which identified the aforementioned behavior as the first means-end,
or intentional, act of babies.
Most adults think of intelligence as involving the perception and manipulation of ideas in the mind. Alfred Binet, the father of intelligence testing, defined the core of intelligence as good judgment. Good judgment presupposes the comparison of options. As far as anyone can tell, that form of intelligence does not make its appearance in any substantial form until late in the second year of life. There is little reason to think that Phase I babies do very much thinking, in the ordinary sense of the term. Throughout the first eighteen months of life, most of whatever intelligence a baby possesses is revealed in a trial-and-error style of problem-solving that features hand-eye behavior. In other words, you can witness problem-solving in the behavior of your baby between six and twenty-two months of age.
The initial collection of reflexlike behavior patterns that newborns show is not, however, irrelevant to intelligence. According to Piaget, it is from these simple isolated acts, like grasping and glancing, that mature intelligence develops.
Emotionality
The Phase I infant has few mood states. Her favorite condition, day and night, is sleep. When awake, she will present one of several emotional-behavior sets: groggy, sober, inactive, and quiet; or alert, sober, inactive, and quiet; or alert, sober, and active with an occasional noise or two; or alert, active, and in mild distress, with occasional squalls; or obviously very unhappy (active and raging). Throughout the first year of life, babies shift moods with surprising speed.
Motor and Sensory Skills
During Phase I an infant’s motor abilities increase noticeably. By four months of age he will be routinely holding his head in an upright position for many minutes at a time, and even at six weeks of age his head control will be noticeably better than at birth. He should then be able to hold his head just clear of the surface he is lying on for a few seconds at a time. It will be obvious, however, that the Phase I baby much prefers lying on his stomach or back over any other position.
Similarly, the newborn’s initial tendency to turn her head and grasp with her mouth an object touching her at or near her lips will be more regular and efficient by six weeks. Some progress, too, will be made in tracking slowly moving objects with her eyes. To test for this ability, hold a large (more than five inches in diameter) brightly colored object about a foot from the baby’s eyes, shake it to get her attention, and move it rather slowly to one side. You may have to recapture her attention several times. The difference in performance between the newborn and the six-week-old in this activity is ordinarily substantial.
Another easily observed improvement in motor ability is the increase in facility at getting the fist to the mouth and keeping it there. The newborn seems to be only partially in control of the movements of her arms and hands. By six weeks of age, however, she manages much more often to hold her fist at her mouth. Her purpose, of course, is to have something to suck. By six weeks of age some babies get so skillful at hand-to-mouth behavior that they can pacify themselves. Don’t count on such good fortune, however.
The surprising strength of grasp of the newborn is well known. Especially when alert, the newborn usually has about two pounds of holding power in each hand. This automatic holding on
persists throughout the first six weeks and gradually disappears shortly thereafter. Perhaps the earlier description of the usefulness of this behavior in fetal kangaroos helps to explain its presence.
An accompaniment to the act of holding on by the newborn is the typical fisted position of the fingers. It appears that the Phase I baby has no control over this situation, which prevents tactile exploration during the first six weeks of life. By three months of age this restriction disappears, as does the tendency to grasp with the toes as well as with the fingers.
Sociability
Newborns are not sociable in any ordinary sense of the term. However, two simple signs of sociability do emerge routinely during the first six weeks of life. The first is a tendency, which may begin as early as the first week, for the baby to look toward the eyes of the person holding her. The second is the aforementioned appearance of the first modest smiles
while doing so. These behavior patterns have a mechanical, almost impersonal quality to them. They are rare during Phase I.
Language
The Phase I infant is far too young to understand words and won’t be able to do so for another six months or so. However, he is not deaf. Although his hearing is not quite as acute as that of normal young adults, he can discriminate between an impressive range of sounds, even during the first weeks of life. As I have already remarked, loud noises of all kinds—particularly when he is resting in deep sleep—are likely to startle him. This special sensitivity is most pronounced in the weeks after birth, and startling may be followed by a good deal of crying. A baby who does not startle readily under those conditions may have a congenital hearing loss and should be seen by a pediatric audiologist fairly promptly.
Phase I babies make noises. They not only cry and shriek but may also produce simple sounds when not in distress, although they show little interest in listening to any sounds in the first weeks of life. By three or