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Infant, Mobile Infant, and Toddler Peer Social Sequence (page 3)

By D.S. Wittmer|S.H. Petersen
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

18-36 Months

  • Toddlers can show kindness to others who are feeling distressed. The toddler, however, may assume that what will comfort them will also comfort the distressed child. So, the one child may offer his blanket or bottle to the hurt or sad child.
  • Friendships can develop early. Friends are more likely to touch, lean on one another, and smile at each other than are children who are not friends.
  • Toddler friendship is "proximity seeking," wanting to be close and to show affection, such as smiling, laughing and hugging. Friends prefer each other as interaction partners.
  • Pushing, shoving, grabbing, and hitting may occur as children struggle over "mine for as long as I want it" and "yours, but I want it, too." Toddlers may fight over small toys more than large, nonmoveable objects.
  • Some are capable of offering help to others that are hurt or sad. Some may have an impressive repertoire or altruistic behavior, and if one thing doesn't work they will try another way.
  • They may have toddler kinesthetic conversations as they follow a leader in moving around the room- moving in and out of the group, taking turns as leader and follower- as if in a conversation of listening and talking, learning valuable turn-taking skills.
  • Toddlers may congregate and cluster and herd together. When a teacher begins playing with an interesting activity with one child, children often come running from the corners of the room.
  • They may work together constructing with blocks- for example, with one the leader and the other the follower.
  • They may work together toward a common goal.
  • Children become more positive and less negative in their social play between 24 and 36 months.
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