percentile height toddler
2010

Understanding your child's growth
Toddler-hood is an important phase in the development of your baby. It is at this moment that most of the children perfect will begin their walk and talk and respond in an interactive manner. It is also a time when the rapid pace of growth they have experienced so far reduced gradually.
Your child's growth are two aspects to it, physically and mentally. Physical growth refers to increasing the height and weight and other attributes physicists of his son. Mental development concerns the increase in their child's mental development, including the ability to think, imagine, analyze, judge wrong and right, etc.
One can understand the growth of your child with the help of the 'growth charts. "Pediatricians often use growth charts to monitor child growth. The growth chart is a plot of your child's height and weight against age to form a growth curve.
Your pediatrician would able to give proper instructions on how to draw and read growth chart for your child to learn if your child is growing normally or not. Depending on the amount you want to record data, and some parents love to record everything, you can download graphics from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in www.cdc.gov/nchs/about/major/nhanes/growthcharts/ charts.htm.
However, most parents can only ask to see the growth chart in their regular appointments with your pediatrician. Be sure to ask if your baby is compared to other infants in three key statistics: weight, height, and head size. Ask your doctor if any of these numbers appear low for the baby's age.
It is important to note that children aged six to eighteen months may have much fluctuation in the growth curves, because the growth rate is higher in this period. So the doctor above all for changes in the percentile ranking to see if the relative size of your baby stable. Note that later, the growth curves for older children tend to be more stable because they tend to grow more slowly.
Because children learn to speak, pauses and repetitions of syllables or words that are normal. Parents often notice stuttering episodes, interspersed with periods of normal speech. Read more about stuttering in young children
About the Author
Paul Banas is a founder of GreatDad.com. He writes articles on pregnancy care, unusual baby names, toilet training, parenting tips and many more topics related to dads.
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