Give Your Baby The Best Start For Life!

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Discover Your baby's Full Development Potential!

Congratulations on completing your personal development assesment!

By taking this assessment, you've taken the first step towards understanding and enhancing your baby's early development. Below, you'll find detailed feedback on your child's development, milestones, playtime activities, and sensory stimulation. Dive in to uncover valuable insights that will help you nurture your tiny tot's growth and well-being.

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Overall Score

Your Baby Boy Is On His Way To Achieve His Full Development Potential!

0-3 Months Development

You're on the right track in supporting your baby's growth and learning. Keep up the good work and continue to explore new ways to engage with and nurture your little one.

In the first few months after birth, you and your newborn baby experience many rapid and exciting changes together. In this stage of your baby’s life, you will need to focus on creating a womb-like environment that will allow your newborn a step-by-step transition from the womb to the outside world.

What to expect?

You're doing well with providing engaging playtime activities for your baby. To enhance their experience, try incorporating more sensory-rich experiences into their play sessions. Try to introduce more textures, sounds, and visuals into their environment to enhance their sensory experiences.

Your newborn development begins in the womb. In the first few months of pregnancy, the fetus begins to mature along with the development of various bodily systems, which later help your child throughout his or her life.In the first few months after birth, you and your newborn baby experience many rapid and exciting changes together.

When your baby is born, in a healthy birth, and on or around his due date, in the first three months you can expect to see him successfully laying on his stomach, lifting his head as he lays on his stomach, beginning to establish eye contact, beginning to make some sounds, and releasing the primitive reflexes that he was born with.

These reflexes determine sensomotoric developments, and we expect that at around ages 3 to 4 months these reflexes will leave his system.In this stage of your baby’s life, we will focus on creating a womb-like environment that will allow your newborn baby a step-by-step transition from his mother’s womb to the outside world.

Every baby has his own developmental pace, and it’s important that we, as parents, help him pave his path by supporting and encouraging him to pass the first few levels of his growth in order to fulfill his full developmental potential.

Each phase is built off of the last. Your baby must pass each stage in his development in order to successfully grow, and that is why it is so important to begin this learning process from the very first days of your baby’s life.

Where Should You Focus?

Your baby is on track with their milestones, but there is room for improvement. Focus on activities that target specific skills they may be struggling with to help them progress further:

  • Get familiarize with the basic and most comfortable baby holding positions.
  • Get the tools and the information you need to cope with your baby crying, why and what to do. - Important!
  • Find out how to cope with your baby's gas, what to do and when you should consult your pediatrician.
  • Focus on your baby tummy time routines and lifting the head the right way.
  • Familiarize your baby with laying on and know all the sides of his body for future coordination.
  • Know what are infant growth spurts, what does it mean and what you need to know. - Important!

By 3 Months Your Baby Should...

  • Smile independently to attract your attention.
  • Look at you, moves, or produces sounds to gain or maintain your attention.
  • Vocalize sounds such as "oooo" or "aahh" (cooing).
  • Turns the head towards the direction of your voice.
  • Open mouth when seeing a breast or bottle when hungry.
  • Hold the head steady without assistance when being held.
  • Grasp and hold onto a toy when placed in the hand.
  • Bring hands to mouth.
  • Lift up onto elbows/forearms when lying on the stomach.

Track Your Baby Growth

Track your baby growth according to the World Health Organization. (Click image to enlarge).

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