The importance of touch for your newborn's emotions
For many of us, a hug is just what we need after (or before) a hard day; touch helps us to build relationships and regulate our emotions. Your newborn baby has been aware of touch since around the eighth week of your pregnancy and they will have felt their hands touching their face and mouth before they were born.
Heads up! Your newborn's primitive reflexes
Your new baby doesn't have the strength to control their head when they are born, but you will soon notice them holding their head steady and starting to look at things: this is thanks to primitive reflexes. In this article, we look at the part that these reflexes play in your baby’s early head movements and gradual control of the rest of their body.
Let’s pretend – the power of imaginative play
“Play is a conduit through which children nurture the social and cognitive skills required to learn how to learn.”[1]
Sleepy (and not-so-sleepy) babies! Learn about your newborn's sleep
Sleep (or lack of it) will take up a lot of your and your baby’s time, and well-meaning friends and family will probably have tons of advice for you. In this article, we explore some of what is known about a newborn baby's sleep pattern. It might not give you more shut-eye, but it will help to make sense of the topsy turvy sleep routines you may be experiencing.
Treasure baskets – opening up your baby's sensory exploration!
You might have heard people talking about 'treasure baskets' or seen adverts for them and wondered what exactly people were talking about. Here, we explain what this tantalizing term involves, why you might want one for your baby, as well as how can you make one at home.
What is a treasure basket?
Getting to know and playing with your baby
Babies, toddlers and children learn through play, and your playful interactions with your new baby have a big part in this!
A photo a day – let's chat away
Can you capture a moment on your camera at the same time once a day?
Samuel Ryde did! A London-based photographer, Samuel took one photo every day at 12.34pm for 10 years, purely to capture everyday moments. He took photos of things that he normally walked past without even noticing. These photos were taken wherever he was at that exact time.
Sam’s idea encourages us to start taking notice of the ‘normal’ – the things we stop looking at.
Your child’s knowledge and understanding of their world is ever growing, and even though children tend to notice more than adults,[1,2] they may not think the ordinary, day-to-day things they see are worth talking about, especially when little focus is put on them by their family and friends.
Five books to support your toddler's move to a new bed
Are you taking the sides off your child’s cot, or perhaps they’re moving from your bed into their own? Here are five of our favourite books that will set the scene for bedtime and support your child in settling into a new routine.
Did you know, elephants might recognise themselves in a mirror?
Your toddler might be realising the reflection in the mirror is them, and this is thought to show that their self-awareness is developing. The experiment that shows this involves putting a dot on a child’s face without them noticing. If they touch their face when they look in the mirror, it is thought that they understand that the reflection is them.
Hide and seek – supporting your child’s development with a classic game
According to Britannica.com, hide and seek was first described by a second-century Greek writer, Julius Pollux. It is a game that has been around for a while and is played throughout the world.