|
|
| Tuesday, 9-Oct-2007 12:00 |
Email | Share | | Bookmark |
|
Muhammad Amsyar Sallehin - .......the cave
|
|
Amsyar has his own cave........
the CAVE
"ini harta.........Muhammad Amsyar yang punya.....ha..ha...ha..."
"Ho.....siapa yang cuba nak ambil harta karun ni............"
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Thursday, 4-Oct-2007 04:51 |
Email | Share | | Bookmark |
|
Muhammad Amsyar Sallehin - ..............................
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Tuesday, 2-Oct-2007 06:43 |
Email | Share | | Bookmark |
|
Muhammad Amsyar Sallehin - 14 Months Old-week two
|
|
Testing "baju raya".
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Monday, 1-Oct-2007 04:38 |
Email | Share | | Bookmark |
|
Muhammad Amsyar Sallehin - 14 Months Old-week two
|
|
Shopping "baju raya".
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Thursday, 27-Sep-2007 07:37 |
Email | Share | | Bookmark |
|
Muhammad Amsyar Sallehin - 14 Months Old.
|
|
Milestone 14 months
Mastered Skills (most kids can do)
• Eats with fingers
• Empties containers of contents
• Imitates others
Emerging Skills (half of kids can do)
• Toddles well
• Initiates games
• Points to one body part when asked
• Responds to instructions (e.g., "give me a kiss")
Advanced Skills (a few kids can do)
• Uses a spoon or fork
• Matches lids with appropriate containers
• Pushes and pulls toys while walking
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Monday, 24-Sep-2007 12:00 |
Email | Share | | Bookmark |
|
Muhammad Amsyar Sallehin - 14 Months Old.
|
|
Milestone-the experts says.........
If your child has been walking for several weeks or even months, his confidence and steadiness have probably grown with each day. See how he's able to start and stop smoothly, or can stoop down to pick up a toy without falling over? Fourteen-month-old also love to move objects from one place to another; they never seem to tire of pushing boxes and laundry baskets around a room. In fact, you'll observe that he's constantly in motion, testing out his physical abilities. He may try to kneel on the floor or a chair, or attempt to scoot up a staircase, or climb onto a coffee table. His enthusiasm far surpasses his abilities, so monitor his explorations closely.
If your child has yet to walk, rest assured that it's just a matter of time. Before you know it, you'll be chasing him all over the place. Just remember that a child who walks as early as 9 months or as late as 18 months is completely normal.
Be sure to childproof your home. The best way to make sure that your child can't injure himself is to take a tour of each room in your house on your hands and knees and look for trouble — the kind your child could get himself into. Install hardware-mounted safety gates at the tops of staircases, plug electrical outlets, remove breakable items from tables where your curious child could inadvertently pull them down onto himself, and so on.
Toddlers love to touch. In fact, they want to touch and feel everything they can — the bark on a tree, the family pets, the water as it pours out of a hose. If you keep in mind that touch is an important learning tool for toddlers, that it's one way they memorize details about various objects, it may help you stop saying "don't touch" whenever your 14-month-old stretches out a hand.
Emptying containers is still a favorite pastime. But a typical 14-month-old is also busy trying to perfect some finer movements. He might try to put on his own shoes, for instance, but become very frustrated when he can't do it himself, and gesture to you for help. Toddlers also love to manipulate objects, such as stuffing a box with blocks, or pulling pegs out of a pegboard
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Monday, 17-Sep-2007 07:04 |
Email | Share | | Bookmark |
|
Muhammad Amsyar Sallehin - 13 Months Old-weeks 4
|
|
This week achievement.
Switch the TV on/off.
Manage to climb up the sofa himself. Before he only managed to climb the sofa in the dining
because it is lower compare to this one.
何を見とん。。。。。
かかってこい。。。。
The experts says.......
At 13 months, children are testing their powers of observation and they're beginning to understand that objects are permanent. In other words, she's beginning to realize that a toy still exists even when she can't see it.
The toddler is honing her problem-solving skills, doing things like trying to fit objects inside others, turning on switches, and twisting stove knobs. Since she can't recognize danger, be sure your house is adequately childproofed.
Around 13 months, many toddlers have vocabularies that consist of three or four words. Yours can probably say "mama" or "dada," and something like "ta ta," for thank you, "ba" for bottle or ball, and "bye-bye." But don't be upset if she can't. She's still in what experts call the "passive" phase of language acquisition. That means she's soaking up all the words and speech around her, and filing the information away for later use. Even if she doesn't say any words clearly, she can probably communicate her needs with gestures (holding her arms out so you'll pick her up), sounds, and body positions, such as turning her head away from something she doesn't want.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Thursday, 13-Sep-2007 06:21 |
Email | Share | | Bookmark |
|
Muhammad Amsyar Sallehin - 13 Months Old-weeks 3
|
|
Muhammad Amsyar started to love to hear mum sing for him from his nursery songs book.
He will sing the "e i e i o " when mum sing "Old McDonald song".
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Wednesday, 12-Sep-2007 12:00 |
Email | Share | | Bookmark |
|
Muhammad Amsyar Sallehin - Wishing Ramadhan Mubarak
|
|
Wishing Ramadhan Mubarak
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Monday, 10-Sep-2007 08:32 |
Email | Share | | Bookmark |
|
Muhammad Amsyar Sallehin - Photo after 2nd hair cut.
|
|
Milestone
Amsyar is bigger now, if not so big physically he is already 13 months old. He is smarter now.
Dad is so happy that Amsyar preferred him to anyone else on this planet. Amsyar follow dad anywhere he goes, even to the bathroom also. We were told that he's experiencing separation anxiety, a developmental phase that nearly all children go through (sometimes more than once) during their early years. And, thankfully, it isn't permanent.
According to the expert, at around 6 months, the baby begins to realize that we and him are separate, which means that you could leave him. He's also capable of "representational thinking" now, which means that he can picture objects (like you) in his mind after they're no longer visible. In other words, out of sight no longer means out of mind. (This is one reason why he suddenly gets such a kick out of "peekaboo.") As the child grows into toddler-hood, he's developing a strong drive for independence, but he still needs our undying support. All this can lead to a fear that you've abandoned him whenever you're not there.
What to do
Wave bye-bye when you leave.
It's a simple tactic but one that many parents ignore. Instead, fearing the wrath of their toddler, they try to sneak out of the house while he's otherwise engaged. Big mistake. This approach may save you the pain of watching your child cry, but it can actually make his separation anxiety more severe. If your child thinks you might disappear at any given moment without notice, he's not going to let you out of his sight. This also goes for nighttime departures. Some parents try to avoid the whole ordeal by putting their child down for the night before the babysitter arrives. That's all well and good — if he doesn't wake up. But suppose he does. You don't want him surprised — and possibly terrified — to wake up and find you gone.
Let him learn to cope.
No parent wants her child to feel any unnecessary sadness, but coping with separation is one of the many stresses your child will have to learn to manage in life. Sometimes doing nothing — especially if you've already tried everything — is the best advice. "Learning to cope is an important developmental task, Your child has to learn that there are times when he's going to be unhappy." If your child's clinging is so severe that you can't even cross the room without a protest, for example, you may be making the situation worse by constantly caving to his demands. If you know that he's safe, it's okay to let him cry a bit. In a matter-of-fact voice, reassure him that's everything's okay, then go ahead and do whatever it is you need to do — without feeling guilty.
|
|
|
|