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Help Your Child's Curiosity Grow by Letting Her Use Her Five Senses

Last Updated: September 26, 2008

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Parenting Tips for Your 9 Month Old Baby

Researchers have learned that curiosity is very important for success in school. Curiosity is an interest in exploring and finding out more about what happens.

A child who is interested in what is happening around her watches to see what happens and learns from it.

You can’t really teach curiosity with flash cards or similar teaching methods. Young children learn best when they are in charge of their own learning, not when you try to force something on them.

Your child’s first year is a very important time in laying a foundation for a lifetime of curiosity.

You can help your child develop curiosity about her world. Research suggests that encouraging a child to explore is very important. This helps the child develop the curiosity skills needed to answer questions she faces as she gets older. Here are some ideas that you can begin working on right away:

  • Ears: Let your child listen to music. Help her make sounds by banging blocks together. Talk and sing to your baby.
  • Eyes: Use brightly colored clothes, toys, and room decorations. Show your baby the pictures that hang on your walls and the pictures in books and magazines.
  • Touch: Give your child many textures - soft, hard, smooth, and rough. Touch your child and let her touch your skin, hair, and clothing. Tell your baby what she is touching as she touches it.
  • Taste: Encourage your child to try new and different foods.
  • Smell: Give your baby many chances to smell safe things, such as soap, perfume, food, flowers, and feet.

The child who is curious is a child who is learning. Try to see and hear things as your baby does. Share the experience. When your baby gets excited about something, she probably has had a “wonderful idea” about it. That is what learning is all about!


Learn more about Your 9 Month Old Baby from Just In Time Parenting. You can also go to our Resource Links for additional information on child care and development.
Note to Parents: When reading this newsletter, remember: Every baby is different. Children may do things earlier or later than described here. This newsletter gives equal space and time to both sexes. If he or she is used, we are talking about all babies.
References: These materials were adapted by authors from Extension Just in Time Parenting Newsletters in California, Delaware, Georgia, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine, Tennessee, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, and Wisconsin.

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