Milestones: What is all the fuss about?

milestone_in_design

Heard this before?

“My child walked at 10 months, isn’t it amazing?”, “Oh no! My child is 14 months and taking a few wobbly steps. I am so concerned!”

Often, our concern about our child’s development is overwhelming. At such times, having something to measure against is reassuring. A developmental checklist provides parents a good way of keeping track of their child’s development. Typically this checklist is made of certain skills that should be visible at each age. These are called milestones. Lets understand why these are important for parents.

Development has been intricately linked with milestones from centuries.  A quick Google search revealed that the first formal assessments were used in the western world to test larger number of school kids at the same time after schooling became compulsory. However the first formal standardized test developed was the Stanford-Binet IQ test in 1905. The earliest developmental tests were developed by Giselle in 1911, based on observations of infants.  As standardization become more common, developmental milestones were observed in larger cohorts to formalize these ranges as well.

Development of skill is extremely individualistic. Just like two individuals following the same recipe will not be able to replicate the exact taste, no two children can grow in the same exact manner. Several studies, with twins and siblings, have shown that growing up with the same set of parents and environment does not mean the rate of development or even the qualities within the children would be the same. Holistic development of a child is a delicate balancing act of parent personality, child personality and the environment around them.

Untitled2

So exactly what are milestones?

1) Milestones are skills laid down at certain intervals along the path of development. But development is not linear and two dimensional like a roadway. Therefore, developmental milestones cannot be thought as one fixed point on this continuum.

2) Milestones are categorized in five distinct areas.

Untitled

All these five areas are development simultaneously and are inter-linked with each other. For example: skill in the adaptive area like brushing teeth requires motor skill of upright balance and hand movements to have developed beforehand. A skill in the speech area like responding to a question requires cognitive and social skills to be in place as well.

3) Milestones are ordered in sequence from easy to complex. In the initial months, milestones in the five areas seem easy and obvious. These early skills are the foundation for later skills. Simplest example is learning the alphabet around 2 years builds to reading and language skills in pre-school years.

 4) Milestones are points fixed as the average age for that skill. So basically a large sample of children was observed and the age of achievement of a skill was noted. Then the average age was taken to be the fixed point for that skill milestone. So if there were 100 infants who were observed for sitting milestone and the earliest age was 6 months while the latest was 10 months, on the milestone checklist, sitting would be placed at 8 months.  Parents should be aware of this aspect

 5) Milestones should not be used in isolation while tracking your child’s development.  As we have discussed above, developmental areas are not independently demarcated. Skills are inter-linked. There is a cause for concern when you see a whole bunch of skills missing or lagging on one or more areas.

Why are milestones important?

1) Reassurance: Parents, especially first timers, are always concerned about raising a healthy, happy child. Following a developmental milestone checklist is the easiest and simplest way to get that reassurance.

2) Early detection:  Following the milestone checklist also gives parents an early inclination of any red flags in developmental pathways. Early detection is the key to getting the right help to prevent and intervention in case of any delays.

3) Holistic development: Tracking with milestones will allow parents to focus on holistic development of their children rather than focus only on certain socially or culturally acceptable skills.

Where can you find a good milestone checklist?

Pathways.org is an organization dedicated to creating free resources for parents to understand their child’s development. Their resources are evidence based and renowned world wide for easy of use for parents.

Here is the link to their developmental checklist.

We hope that parents are able to look at milestones with a slightly more open perspective rather than focusing on them as a rigid entity. The most important aspect of development is progress- adding something new in learning various skills by exploring their environment and limits of their movements.

Till then,

Happy Parenting!

Puja

4/12/2015