Topic

Crawling and Sitting

Crawling is revolutionary for babies - they can now move around and explore all by themselves! Sitting opens up a whole new world of interaction for social and language development as well as opportunities to develop fine motor skills and explore how the world works. If you are looking for accurate, evidence-based information on when crawling and sitting, when they should happen and how you can support these skills, you're in the right place.

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Baby milestones
Baby Milestones

This Milestone Guide is not a checklist! It's a beautiful visual of the mini-milestones your little one may (or may not) go through from birth to walking.

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Rolling

FAQs

About half of babies, will be able to sit by themselves around 6.5 months.

Most babies, 90%, will be able to sit by themselves around 8 months.

Crawling could be commando crawling, pulling themselves along on their tummy, maybe arms pull together and toes push off and then maybe they start to use arms and legs alternately. Crawling can be on hands and knees with stepping on each side of the body. We’ve seen babies that bunny hop on hands and knees, babies that crawl on feet and hands like a bear, bubs with leg preferences, having one up and one down, there are those who stay in sitting and shuffle on their bottom and some don’t even crawl at all.

Floor mobility appears from around 5 months to 13 months, which is a normal range for typically developing children. Some babies will love to move and choose to do it often, others may not enjoy it as much. Every baby is different and this is okay! Every baby develops at a slightly different rate and this is normal! Each baby has their own strengths, interests, confidence level, personality, size, opportunity and desire to practice and explore and this feeds into when and how they choose to move.

We recommend seeking help from your GP, child health nurse or paediatric physiotherapist by 9 months of age if:

1. Bub is feeling super stiff (difficult to bend or straighten legs or arms) or super floppy (feels like a sack of potatoes that’s about to slip through your hands when you hold them!)

2. Prefers to stand on one side or only uses one arm to pull up with or play with (Asymmetrical)

3. Difficulties with feeding solids, maybe choking, gagging or refusing many foods

4. Doesn't seem to hear noises or their name when called

5. Struggling to hold their head up in tummy time or reach for toys in front

6. Not rolling, or showing signs of rolling, by 7-8 months

7. Not sitting independently by 8 months

8. Not crawling, or showing signs of crawling (what we call mini milestones ie on hands and knees), by 10-11 months

Articles

Crawling and Sitting

Layered Play

I absolutely love layered play for bubs at ANY stage of development when they are frustrated to help them figure out and explore how their body moves, progressing their development and reducing frustrations. What is layered […]

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