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Movement and Space Health and Bodily Awareness Using Equipment and Materials
Birth-11 Months
 
  • How young babies begin to explore through their bodily movements.
  • The physical skills that young babies use to make contact with people and objects.

  • How young babies learn to lift their heads and later, hold their heads steady.
  • Examples of when young babies try to move their heads to look at the things that interest them.
  • Times when babies begin to be able to hold their own bodies and heads steady when in a sitting position.
  • Why babies want to move and how they learn to roll from side to side and then from front to back.
Early Support

 
  • Young babies' hunger patterns and how they regulate the speed and intensity with which they suck.
  • How they show they are relaxed when they feel safe and cared for.

  • How babies open their mouths for a bottle and close their mouths around the teat.
  • How babies suck and coordinate sucking and swallowing.
  • How regular a baby's feeding pattern is throughout the day.
  • How babies put their hands on their bottle when feeding.
  • How babies establish a regular pattern of sleeping throughout the day.
Early Support

 
  • The way young babies' eyes follow the movements of their fingers and toes.
  • How young babies grasp and clutch at anything in reach.
  • How young babies begin to reach out towards things in which they are interested.
  • How young babies use their hands and mouths to explore objects.
  • Ways in which young babies begin to explore different textures.
  • How young babies learn to hold first one object and then more than one object.
Early Support

8-20 Months
 
  • The way young babies coordinate actions to move around the space on their feet, bottoms, backs, tummies and hands and knees.
  • How babies like to move.
  • What babies like to try to reach for and play with, and the skills they develop, such as pulling to stand and walking.
  • The skills babies build up as they learn to crawl and then pull themselves up to a standing position from sitting. What motivates them to want to move?
  • How babies use furniture and other objects to support their first steps and what encourages them to become more confident walkers.
  • Examples of why children begin to carry things with them as they walk.
  • How babies begin to explore stairs and what motivates them to want to go up or down.
Early Support

 
  • How babies' behaviour changes as they get tired and require sleep.
  • The ways in which babies indicate that they need help.

Feeding:

  • How babies begin to open their mouths to take food from a spoon.
  • The range of food (consider textures and tastes) that a baby accepts.
  • How babies begin to grasp finger foods and bring them to their mouths.
  • How babies learn to use a spoon and sipper cup to feed themselves.

Sleeping:

  • How often babies need a nap during the day and how this changes over time.

Washing:

  • How babies cooperate and participate when being washed.

Toileting:

  • How babies cooperate when their nappy is being changed.
Early Support

 
  • Babies' actions such as clapping, pointing, grasping and dropping things.
  • The ways babies pat, pinch and grasp sand, paste or paint.
  • How young babies begin to release toys from their grasp and drop things.
  • How babies play with containers and begin to put one thing inside another.
  • How babies explore small objects, such as crumbs.
Early Support

16-26 Months
 
  • How young children move with their whole bodies to show their excitement, interest, amusement or annoyance.
  • The sensory experiences of, for example, rolling, spinning, rocking and physical contact with adults enjoyed by children.
  • The ways in which young children are developing skills, sometimes creeping, crawling, climbing, walking or throwing.
  • The circumstances in which children ask for help and want to hold an adult's hand to help them walk or climb up and down stairs.
  • How independent children want to be as they climb into a child's chair or sit at a table.
  • How aware children are of obstacles when they walk or run and how they learn to negotiate furniture and other objects safely.
Early Support

 
  • Young children's interest in bodily functions and when they communicate their needs.
  • The choices young children make, for example, asking for the same story again and again.
  • Patterns of play, such as repeatedly climbing on to and off a step.

Feeding:

  • How children begin to participate in mealtime routines with other children and adults.
  • How children learn to scoop food up with a spoon for themselves and learn to use a fork.
  • How children hold a cup and learn to drink without spilling.
  • How the range of food textures and tastes enjoyed by a child increases and how they learn to eat larger pieces of food.

Washing:

  • The way children learn to wash their hands.

Toileting:

  • How children tell you their nappy or pants need changing.
  • How children begin to show that they understand what a potty or toilet is used for.
Early Support

 
  • Ways babies prefer to eat their food, such as grasping a spoon, using their fingers, or holding a fork.
  • How young children begin to recognise the conventional uses of some objects, such as a cup for drinking.
  • How children show they are beginning to prefer their right or left hand.
  • How children play with bricks and how they learn to build taller towers using more bricks as time goes by.
  • How children use both of their hands, for example, holding a toy with one hand and manipulating it with the other.
  • How children play with pieces of a puzzle.
  • How children explore the properties of new objects by turning, pressing or rolling them.
Early Support

22-36 Months
 
  • The new skills children continue to achieve such as jumping, kicking a ball or balancing on one leg.
  • Chosen ways of moving and the way children experiment with movement and balance, turning upside down, crawling or rolling.
  • How a child responds physically to stimuli such as seeing an aeroplane flying overhead.
  • How children respond to different types of music.
  • The ways children try to copy movements or repeat skills they have achieved.
  • How children join movements such as running, stopping and jumping, climbing and turning.
  • The different ways children use their bodies to express themselves imaginatively.
  • How children begin to show an interest in climbing equipment and how they explore it.
Early Support Video

 
  • The signs, gestures or words young children use to convey what their needs are at any time.



Feeding:

  • How children tell you that they are hungry.

Toileting:

  • How children tell you they need the potty or toilet.
  • When children learn to sit on a potty or toilet.
Early Support

 
  • How children are developing fine movements of their fingers and hands to grip, twist, bang and make marks.
  • How they are building up strength in their arms and hands through large muscle activities such as climbing.
  • How children learn to put objects down neatly and precisely.
  • How children learn to pick up very small objects.
  • How children's control of fine movement develops as they begin to turn the pages in a book, one at a time, or to fold paper.
  • How children begin to use scissors on paper.
  • The strategies children use to open a screw-topped jar.
Early Support

30-50 Months
 
  • How children move enthusiastically, using their arms and legs in a spontaneous dance, or shaking their bodies in time to music, when they are sad, happy or excited.
  • Children's increasing confidence in what they can do and their enjoyment of physical activities.
  • Some of the strategies children find to avoid banging into one another, and objects, as they negotiate space.
  • Children's skill development, deciding if it is exploratory and experimental or repetitive, and whether they are ready for a new challenge.
  • Efforts to try something new and persevere at a skill.
  • The ideas that children suggest to make things 'fair'.
  • Children's developing confidence and competence walking up and down stairs.
Early Support Video

 
  • Children's recognition of their own needs, such as when they tell you their lace is undone and need help to fasten it.
  • The ways children demonstrate understanding of healthy practices such as by saying they need a tissue, or putting a cup in the sink ready to be washed.
  • Children's understanding that they need a rest or a drink after a burst of activity.

Feeding:

  • Children's growing confidence using a range of different eating utensils.
  • How children pour liquid from a jug into cups.

Washing:

  • How children learn to wash and dry their own hands and face, including turning on the taps at a wash basin for themselves.
  • When children learn to blow their noses if a tissue is held up.

Toileting:

  • The different ways children ask for the toilet using voice, gestures or actions.
  • The pattern of children's learning as they become mostly dry during the day and later, reliably dry and clean.
  • How children behave in the toilet. Can they flush the toilet for themselves and do they wait to be wiped?
Early Support

 
  • The ways children manage to make things work successfully, such as when they wheel a buggy, turn a whisk or 'vacuum' the carpet.
  • The things that inspire children to want to create or construct.
  • The variety of skills children use to manipulate materials and objects, such as picking up, releasing, threading and posting objects.
  • Children's strategies, efforts and achievements in fastening and unfastening items such as containers, clothing and cupboards.
  • Children's skills in fixing, creating play worlds and using materials and equipment safely and appropriately.
40-60+ Months
 
  • The different ways children find of moving across and off and on objects.
  • How children combine movements to make simple sequences.
  • The way children recognise the need to take account of space when they plan to do things such as building and demolishing a tower or riding a wheeled toy.
  • The ways children manage themselves safely.
  • The ways children negotiate equipment by, for example, balancing, climbing, sliding or slithering.
  • Children's fine motor control when using a pencil or a brush.
  • Children's free, spontaneous movement and how they demonstrate control.
 
  • How children indicate that they are hungry or need to wash their hands before starting to cook.
  • Children's familiarity with hygienic practices, such as throwing used tissues in a bin.
  • Children's understanding of what they need to do to maintain health, for example, a child telling others they are going to the dentist: "I need to have a check-up to keep my teeth strong".
  • Children talking about and feeling their heart beating after running, without prompting from an adult.
 
  • Children's preferred hand for putting on clothes or using a paintbrush.
  • Children's developing ball skills.
  • Children's play patterns, identifying the ways they show interest in using a range of equipment and materials.
  • The different ways children explore and manipulate materials.
  • The tools children use to achieve effects.
  • Some of the ways children demonstrate their understanding of the need for handling equipment safely, such as when they carry a chair, ensuring they point its legs towards the ground.
  • How children use their skills when creating something they need in their play, or want to give to a friend.