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Baby Steps
Helping Your Child Learn to Walk
By Heather Johnson Durocher
Of all the milestones your baby will reach during the first year of life, the most amazing is taking those first precious steps alone.
Beth Skarupa, mother of four, is looking forward to her youngest child reaching this milestone. At 10 months of age, Joey "cruises on anything now the couches, chairs he pulls up on absolutely everything," his mother says.
"Every milestone leading up to walking is important: holding up the head, pushing up, rolling over, sitting up, crawling, standing and cruising," says Sally Goldberg, parenting specialist and author of Constructive Parenting (Allyn & Bacon, 2001) and Baby and Toddler Learning Fun: 50 Interactive and Developmental Activities to Enjoy With Your Child (Perseus Publishing, 2001).
While walking may not occur until later, Goldberg says it is developmentally important for your child to be standing up or cruising around objects by 1 year of age. If this isn't happening, parents should consult with a child's health provider to ensure appropriate development.
While crawling is important as a stage of development, Goldberg says, it's "not a necessity for being able to walk."
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