T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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689.1 | Maybe a long time ago | TPS::JOHNSON | | Thu Feb 07 1991 13:40 | 19 |
| Jacki,
I believe this is an "old" theory/discovery. Years
ago (sometime in the late '60's, I think) my Mom
would go with a group of women to help this young
boy learn how to crawl. I know I don't have all
the facts, I was only about 6 or 7 at the time.
The way I remember it, he was older than me and he
had bypassed crawling. They were reteaching him
so that he wouldn't have learning disabilities.
Gee, this looks strange now that I've typed it in.
I'll ask my Mom about it again...
Since then, I have heard that it's okay if a baby
never learns to crawl.
I hope this calms your fears.
Linda
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689.2 | a baby legend | CSSE32::RANDALL | Pray for peace | Thu Feb 07 1991 14:28 | 35 |
| This almost qualifies as an urban legend, and like most urban legends
it has a grain of truth way down at the bottom under all the layers of
myth and misunderstandings.
Children with certain kinds of developmental disorders skip creeping. Note,
not crawling, creeping -- the stage where they drag themselves around on
their stomachs.
In the late 1960's, developmental scientists discovered that a technique
called "patterning," in which a child's arms and legs were moved in the
motion of creeping for several hours several times a day, could apparently
"imprint" a new layer of learning in the brains of some of these
developmentally disabled children, enabling them to progress far
beyond what was usual for that kind of disability. _Reader's_Digest_
had a couple of heartwarming stories about the miracles that could be
worked by dedicated parents applying patterning to children everyone else
had given up on.
Some doctors, or writers of baby books, extrapolated from that that lack
of creeping would indicate the presence of the developmental disorder.
This is apparently a false corelation, though it took a while to establish
that many perfectly normal kids did things in a different order than the
baby books said they should. [Must be because kids don't read baby books:) ]
Doctors of the "better safe than sorry" school did as .1 mentions
and had parents of kids who didn't creep before they crawled go back
and pick up those stages. Then they expanded it to kids who didn't go
through all the developmental stages in order, which is where crawling
got involved.
Other doctors took the patterning technique and tried to apply it to every
case of developmental handicap, even brain damage. That didn't work
either. I don't think patterning is now used regularly to treat any
but cases in which all other treatment has failed to help the child.
--bonnie
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689.3 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Ask Not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for ME! | Thu Feb 07 1991 14:56 | 10 |
| >baby books said they should. [Must be because kids don't read baby books:) ]
I thought it was because writes of baby books don't study real kids!
Don't they just read what other people have written about the way kids
develop and behave and comment on that ? Why should they bother to
look at real kids ... after all other people have done that already ?!
:-)
Stuart
|
689.4 | only 7 months? | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Fri Feb 08 1991 08:52 | 8 |
| 7 1/2 months is somewhat early to show interest in crwling in my
experience. I don't think but one of my kids crawled before nine
months. And then they only went backwards. The one that did crawl
early walked at ten months.
I also remember stories similar to that of the last noter about
"patterning" for learning disabled children.
|
689.5 | Can't prove it by my son | MSESU::HOPKINS | Give PEACE a chance | Fri Feb 08 1991 10:14 | 7 |
| My son, who is now 18, never crawled. He started standing at 7 months
and walked at 9 months...I couldn't believe it! He's fine.
My daughter on the other hand didn't walk until she was about 18
months. She figured why walk when I can get someone to carry me.
Marie
|
689.6 | Worry-Wart | BOOKS::JORDAN | | Fri Feb 08 1991 13:02 | 8 |
| Gee, now I'm a bit worried. Neal is 8 months old and the most
he can do when set on his stomach is the sky-diver's pose.
Sometimes he spins himself like a board-game spinner. . .
He sits well by himself, when put in a sitting position.
And he actually runs in his walker. But the creeping and
crawling just isn't there. I can't imagine a baby just
skipping the creeping/crawling stages for walking. Isn't
creeping/crawling a natural progression to walking?
|
689.7 | | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Fri Feb 08 1991 13:31 | 9 |
|
My daughter didn't crawl until she was 10 mos old, and crawled for
about 2 months, after that she was walking.
She was a chunky kid, her arms and knees were simply not strong enough
to carry her weigh until then. Also, she was a mellow baby, she wasn't
very anxious to crawl - she loved the walker though.
Eva.
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689.8 | What I've heard... | APACHE::APACHE::FRIEDRICHS | Take the money and run! | Fri Feb 08 1991 13:52 | 6 |
| We were told by our son's PT that it is important to know how to crawl.
Crawling develops the stomach muscles and hip flexors which help in overall
balance later, and also with coordination of arms and legs. It is also
very similar to the way kids get up from the floor to standing and may help
in learning that. Basically what I'm saying is... PT's feel it is an
important part of development.
|
689.9 | No Crawling here | COGITO::FRYE | | Fri Feb 08 1991 16:57 | 17 |
| re: -1
PT? Physical Therapist? I'm just guessing.
re: .6
My daughter never really crawled and didn't walk until 15 months.
When she did walk she was *Really* ready and did very little
falling. She was a very content kid (then) and when we would
place toys out of reach to encourage crawling she would reach
once and then turn her attention to her fingers, the nap of
the rug.....
No seeming ill effects - at 7 1/2 she is doing very well for
her age in ballet.
Norma
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689.10 | Why Crawl when you can run? | DPDMAI::MACHIANO | | Tue Apr 02 1991 15:45 | 13 |
| My son, who is now 17, never crawled. In fact, he would run around his
playpen with one hand on the rail. He really enjoyed his walker.
Today, this 17 year old has completed 3 seasons of high school
football, stands 6'1", and weighs in at 195lbs. So much for the
physical effects of not crawling.
Also, he has scored in the top 5% of Juniors in the U.S. (according
to the PSAT - which is good because it might mean scholarship $$$),
is in the top 10% of his school, and is an Eagle Scout. So much for the
developmental concerns of not crawling.
In short, don't worry - be happy!
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689.11 | | LJOHUB::CRITZ | John Ellis to ride RAAM '91 | Tue Apr 02 1991 16:18 | 9 |
| My mother says I never crawled. That made things tough
on her. She said I weighed 41 pounds when I started to
walk. Mom has never weighed more than 114 pounds, so she
worked hard with me.
Today, at age 43, I'm 6'6'', 270 pounds. It didn't seem
to bother me any.
|