What Are Age Appropriate Expectations From A Toddler

age appropriate expectations from toddlers

Toddler years are the first time many parents start to experience a disconnect with their child. It is frustrating for parents trying to establish firm boundaries to face a constant rule-defying child.

Why does this happen?

Well, the problem usually lies in unrealistic expectations from the child.

And the answer lies in setting age-appropriate expectations.

From my personal experience and talking with 100’s of mothers on Instagram and now proved through this survey,  I can tell you that most friction between parents and toddlers occurs because of incorrect expectations placed on a child that’s not yet ready.

I am happy to collaborate with my friend and fellow Gentle Parenting mama, Vaishali from Amma Today, and share with you information on how to make your life with your toddler more peaceful with less drama.

age appropriate expectations from toddlers

Age-appropriate expectations from toddlers

Let us look at some common areas of struggle for parents and understand what is appropriate to expect from a toddler.

SLEEP

Sleep is a big concern for many parents. Parents are fussing over skipping of the day-time nap (that one big break mothers look forward to in the day) and multiple waking’s in the night.

Sleep deprivation is one of the biggest triggers for anger in parents. So, I get your frustration over your toddler’s seemingly erratic sleep patterns. But let me assure you that what you are experiencing is fairly normal for toddlers.

What are the normal expectations for sleep in toddlers?

Toddlers need about 12-13 hours of sleep every 24 hours. This sleep is usually broken down into 10-12 hours at night, followed by a nap of 1-2 hours during the day.

During the toddler years, the child is increasingly aware of his surroundings, the happenings in and around his home environment and more connected to his caregivers. This often means that the child will try to delay bedtime and stay up with the family.

It is okay to establish certain rules around bedtime, but this entire routine will take a while to set and until then you will need to provide a consistent framework.

Less than 5% of two-year-olds wake three or more times at night. (source)

Now with regards to sleeping through the night, I found this fascinating study that suggests that the norms around sleep need to be revised for breastfed toddlers.

It said that the published norms for infant sleep/wake patterns during the first 2 years of life included an increase in the length of maximum sleep bout from four to five to eight to ten hours by 4 months but a little decrease in total sleep in 24 hours from 13 to 15 hours.

The study followed thirty-two breast-fed infants for 2 years and collected data on 24-hour patterns of nursing and sleep.

It found that infants who were breastfed into the second year did not develop sleep/wake patterns in conformance with the norms. Instead of having long unbroken sleep at night, they continued to sleep in short bouts with frequent wakings for feeds. Their total sleep in 24 hours was less than that of weaned infants.

This pattern was most pronounced in infants who both nursed and shared a bed with the mother, common practices in many non-western cultures.

Therefore the sleep/wake development accepted as the physiologic norm may be attributable to the early weaning and separated sleeping practiced in western culture.

As prolonged breastfeeding becomes more popular in our society, the norms of sleep/wake patterns in infancy will have to be revised. (source)

FOOD

Now the second most important parenting concern and cause for much frustration and stress is food intake.

What is considered age-appropriate in terms of eating patterns and behaviors in young children?

Here are 4 points you need to consider as you set your expectations around food

  1. Growth slows down in the toddler years as compared to baby-hood. This means that toddlers’ food intake will reduce.
  2. Most toddlers are picky eaters, this goes back to the evolutionary protectionist behavior in toddlers. Toddlers being explorers used to roam free and were exposed to different plants and herbs some of which could be poisonous. This protective instinct helped them from accidentally eating a poisonous plant.
  3. Another important point to note is that around one year of age they finally begin to understand what they eat and can exert a level of control on how much they can eat. This brings with it a certain level of self-protection and guards against different flavors and textures. They crave sameness and consistency. This mechanism helps them feel safe and protected in a period where they are rapidly developing new skills such as speech, walking, running, climbing, certain new cognitive skills, etc.
  4. Most toddlers also do not yet possess functional independence, this means they cannot yet eat without making a mess, but they need the opportunity to eat independently and learn how to self-feed. Messy eating is a part of growing up and learning to eat independently, therefore parents who continue to feed their children because they make a mess when they eat are having unrealistic expectations, which in turn robs the child of the opportunity to learn how to eat on his own.

All of this is part of normal growth and development in the toddler years. As parents, you may need to readjust your expectations around the quantity of food consumed per meal (look at this guide here) and allow some messes to be made.

I will add here though, that toddler years are a great time to start working on those table manners and basic mealtime routines. Explain in short sentences and simple words what is expected at the table.

Our son went through a phase of throwing food off the plate;

I had to repeat many times,

“When you don’t like something, keep it on the side of the plate”

When it went on a few more times, I used to lay down a natural consequence.

“We don’t throw food in our house. I will take away your plate if you continue throwing food off the plate.”

And I followed through on my consequence when throwing continued.

In time he got it and stopped the habit.

In the meantime, as we worked on this behavior I also tried my best to understand why throwing was happening.

After a bit of trial and error I figured, when a lot of different foods were placed on his plate, especially in larger quantities, he was overwhelmed. His response was to eat a little and then throw foods off the plate.

Once I understood this, I changed the way I served him food. We started by offering him only one tablespoon of each food on the plate when we served. He could ask for more as he finished. This strategy worked really well.

So the combination of me changing his exposure to bad behavior causing circumstance and applying natural consequences when things got out of hand helped us get through to our son and stop the unwanted behavior.

BEHAVIOR

Toddlers are going through an emotional whirlwind. This is the first time they are experiencing feelings like anger, guilt, shame, frustration, and their tiny brains cannot process these big emotions.

Understanding where your toddler is at emotionally can help parents manage toddler tantrums and unpredictable behaviors.

Offer them age-appropriate choices so they feel a sense of control.

And help them name these new emotions they are going through so they learn to recognize the emotion.

Coach your toddler on how to cope with certain feelings.

The following blog posts will give you exact strategies for handling emotions in toddlers.

How to handle the Terrible twos

Phrases to use when your toddler doesn’t listen

How to deal with aggression in toddlers

DISCIPLINE

Discipline literally means to teach and has nothing to do with punishment. Unfortunately, many parents think of discipline as punishing the child.

In a recent survey, it was found that employees would rather take a pay cut in favor of a better work-life balance. Extrinsic motivators like higher tiles and pay did not lead to more productivity at work. But a work environment that provided employees more control over their lives lead to more intrinsically motivated staff who work better.

This same human psychology works in children.

The more you give your children agency in life, the more settled and cooperative they will be.

Our job as parents is to create freedom within limits.

Our children need safe spaces to move in. And until they can figure it out themselves they need guidance on the subject of safety and how to treat those around them. Guidance, not punishments or shaming. You can call this a period of “hand-holding.”

Children thrive on routines, therefore provide children with a solid routine. A routine adds to sense security and calm.

At the same time understand that any change in routine be it travel, the arrival of a younger sibling, starting school will cause a shift in toddler behavior.

Give your child some grace during such periods and with consistency bring them back to the routine.

Instead of time-outs consider a time-in with the parent. Allow the child some space to figure out what went wrong in the heat of the moment.

At the same time give him the comfort of knowing that his parents love him regardless of his actions.

Certain situations do warrant a more firm approach and for these situations, parents can use Natural Consequences. To understand how to help your child through the chaos and set natural consequences read, Vaishali’s post here.

SOCIALIZATION AND SHARING

Around age 2, parents start making a lot of effort into helping the child socialize. This may be done through play dates or enrolling the child in playgroup.

But for the large part toddlers are still involved in parallel play and may not yet be ready to engage in cooperative play.

Some toddlers also go through stranger anxiety which can make socialization challenging.

How can parents help?

Well, first off, readjust your expectations on what toddler socialization looks like.

Parallel play is as important as cooperative play. Go to the park and on playdates. Your child is observing how other children play, how they talk and engage with those around. Mixed-age groups are very enriching for toddlers to learn from. So, don’t stop social outings because you feel your child is not engaging with those around.

Many parents also make a big deal out of sharing. Sharing happens when the child wants to engage in cooperative play (you will see this skill develop somewhere around age 4). 2-3-year-olds are not yet ready to share their toys and you should not force them to do the same.

You can, however, teach the child to take turns when playing in a group and practice self-control at home through different games. Games like “stop and go”, “lock and key” are great to get toddlers used to following simple instructions and practice controlling impulse.

At the same time, we don’t want to label our children selfish or punish them for skills that are not yet developed and ones that even when developed take long to be established.

My hope with this post is that parents understand that most of the chaos in our parenting lives is self-created when we lack empathy and have unrealistic expectations from our children.

Understanding toddler’s limitations and setting age-appropriate expectations avoid a lot of frustrations and disappointments. How we talk with our children and the expectations we have from them builds their confidence and makes them emotionally resilient in the long run.

What are some of the challenges you face as a toddler mom? Do these stem from unrealistic expectations?

10 Phrases To Use When Your Toddler Doesn’t Listen

phrases to use when toddler does not listen

Many parents complain that their toddler doesn’t listen. Well, first off toddlers are beginning to assert for themselves which is a good thing developmentally. But they may not always have a complete understanding of situations around them, including risk assessment or social etiquette. Besides, the toddler’s brain is still developing impulse control, which makes it really hard for them to wait for things or resist temptation.

Does that mean we resort to traditional disciplinarian methods of parenting and use scare tactics, yelling, and punishments to make the toddler listen? No!

Scaring or punishing a child to discipline is not going to teach the child about why his/her actions are wrong or what the consequences are.

Related reading: What is Gentle parenting?

I found the book, How to talk so little kids will listen instrumental in creating a calmer transition to the twos and threes. This book gives insight into the toddler’s mindset and how parents can effectively communicate with their toddlers and help them follow along.

Here are 10 phrases I use regularly that work like magic in situations when my toddler doesn’t listen.

Phrases to use when your toddler doesn't listen

PHRASES TO USE WHEN YOUR TODDLER DOESN’T LISTEN

  1. We are going to leave in 15 minutes. Instead of we have to leave now. Hurry up!

Prepare your child for what is coming next. Most times knowing about the next plan in the day, helps the child wrap up whatever it is they are doing. It gives the child a timeframe to work with. No one likes to be interrupted when they are immersed in deep focussed work. The same goes for your toddler. He may be busy playing in deep focus. Giving him a heads up prepares him to finish up his game. This way you avoid tantrums at the last minute.

The same phrase works when we are about to get into unfamiliar social settings. For example; “We are going to meet my cousin from the US. He.…(give more information)” This way when the new person enters or introduces himself the child already has some information and doesn’t panic and go into stranger anxiety mode. A simple heads up works in most situations.

Setting a strong family routine keeps most of the tantrums away. Children thrive on routines as they know what is expected of them at each point of the day. If setting strong routines is challenging for you, check the Family Routine’s e-course by Pulling Curls.

What I liked about the program is how it teaches you to set solid routines while giving you a framework to leave more “margins” in your day. This allows you to tackle the unexpected easily, and we all know a happy mommy equals happy kids. Check this life-changing course here.

2. Do you want pizza or pasta for dinner?

Offer a choice.

Do you want to join the party or do you want some time outside before you join in?

Do you want the red pants or the blue ones?

Offering a choice allows the child to be in control of the situation. And once again the child is more receptive to participate along once he feels ready to take on the next task.

Make sure to keep the options limited between two, so that its easier for the child to make up his mind.

3. I see you are finding it difficult to open the lid, do you need help?

If we jump in and help without asking, the toddler will resist and a tantrum ensues. A toddler needs his independence so giving up on something he is trying out has to be his own decision.

By simply asking if he needs help, you are allowing the toddler to take charge of the situation and decide for himself if he does, in fact, need help.

4. Can you use your words, please? Instead of stop whining

This simple request encourages the toddler to express as best he can. Remember to use a very calm tone as you request the child to use his words, you don’t want to come off asking in a stern tone. The parent’s tone of voice is key to holding communications in the right manner.

5. Let’s use gentle hands with the baby. Instead of saying, “Stop doing this” or  ” Stop grabbing the baby”

When around a baby, for example, you want your child to be careful, you can ask him to use a gentle touch. Show how a gentle touch looks like.

If the rough play goes on after repeated reminders it is best to move the child away to another play station.

For more in-depth help with disciplining your child and getting him to listen without yelling, shaming, blaming, or reminding you must check out this online positive parenting course.

This course offers you practical advice and gives you the tools to gain a deeper understanding of yourself, your triggers, how to connect with your child in playful ways, and create a more peaceful home.

6. I am not okay with you getting wet in the rain, because I am afraid you will fall sick. Instead of, stop, don’t walk in the rain.

When you are not comfortable with what your toddler is doing, be it getting wet in the rain, or some sort of risky play use this phrase it works like magic.

The moment I tell my son about my concerns and why I don’t want him to play a certain way, he is more understanding.

I will say, I am not okay with you running on the side of the road, I am afraid you will hurt yourself or,

I am not okay with you getting wet in the rain, because I am afraid you will catch a cold.

7. Let us add this to our wish list

Every parent has faced the tantrum in a store. When the child wants something and wants it right now.

We can’t always give in and buy what they want.

There are two ways I tackle this situation. One is by saying, “Let us add this to our wishlist”. Then I pull out a piece of paper and write it down. I discuss with our son about why we aren’t going to buy now, but I would be happy to include it on the running wishlist.

We have designated times of the year we buy toys, like birthdays and festivals. I pull out the list then and we go through the list together. Sometimes he is no longer interested in some of the toys on the list, at other times I give him a choice to buy 1-2 from his list.

This way he learns to wait in order to buy something and he gets to reconsider a decision. Is it something I really want? You will be surprised how many times it’s the child who will say to you, no, I don’t want that toy anymore.

At other times, I simply, get down to his level and explain to him why we cannot buy that certain toy and how I wish could buy him many many toys, but we can’t, we need to use what we already own first. Again, you may feel that a little child will not agree to reason, but once you start to hold a mature conversation, children are very understanding.

In the book How to talk so little kids will listen the authors list out a fantastic tip that works with younger toddlers during a tantrum and helps them calm down.

If your younger toddler is crying for ice cream for example, simply take out a piece of paper and start drawing it out for the child. You can say, “Let me draw this, so I don’t forget to buy it for you the next time. Let’s see, a triangle for the cone and maybe some sprinkles?” Ask your child to join in. Before you know it, your little one is distracted with the drawing and you can move on.

Believe me, when I first read this in the book, I thought to myself, no-way this works. But it did! Acknowledging the child’s feelings through art helps the child feel heard, acts as a tool to calm down and regulate and once the child is calm you can move on.

I also keep my promise. I usually defer buying him the ice-cream or chocolate to the next up-coming family event. Maybe it is his sister’s birthday next month, we can eat ice-cream then and I make sure to follow-through with my promise.

It is not possible to give in to every demand and this distraction tool helps with emotion handling for 2 year olds. Through art children learn to express how they feel in the moment which is a great start for future conflict resolution.

8. It is okay to be sad/cry 

Sometimes when faced with big emotions instead of saying “stop crying/ you are a big girl/boy now” accept the emotion for them. It is okay to be sad. It is okay to cry.

Acknowledging the feelings helps the child calm down, understand the emotions he is feeling, and make it okay for him to be able to express to you. We want our children to know that it is important to express all feelings, good and bad. That expressing emotion is a healthy exercise.

9. I am going to wait for you to calm down

When no amount of talking and calming down help, it is best to take a step back and allow the child a moment to calm down and self reflect.

You can stay close and say I am going to wait for you to calm down. This phrase works so well for us, both of us end up in a hug moments later and move on to resolving the problem at hand. Sometimes all your child needs is a little space and time to do the self-work.

10. Let us start over- 1, 2, 3…

Some situations demand a do-over. There can be days when everything is just going wrong and you are facing tantrum after tantrum. You may resort to yelling and screaming. But you can change the situation.

Start over

Get down to the child’s level, acknowledge that the day has been rough for both of you, that you don’t want it to continue this way. And then hold hands, take a deep breath count to three and start over.

Save this pin to get back to this list of phrases you can use with your toddler.

Calming Phrases to get toddler to listen

Most importantly,

Remember, there will be times when nothing will work. Your toddler understands that he has expressed his emotions in an unpalatable way. He may not know how to change the situation and go back to calm. But he needs the reassurance that things are still okay, between the two of you.

Here it is important for the parent to say, I Love You. It helps the child feel reassured that your love for them is not dependent on his actions.

Yes, certain actions are unacceptable, but that does not mean you stop loving them.

It is quite possible that the child feels his actions may cause you to stop loving him. And we need him to understand that a parent’s love is unconditional. That you are his safe place to vent and be. That you will guide him and help him through challenging situations.

It can get very difficult as parents to remain calm when we are in the midst of a tantrum but remember you are helping your child learn how to channel his emotions. I feel handling tantrums is one of the most challenging tasks parents have to deal with and at the same time the base to how the relationship will turn out in the future.

That is why I give a lot of importance to helping with emotions because somewhere hidden behind those emotions lie, my sons, true thoughts and feelings about me and our relationship.

Each challenging moment is a moment for us to practice how to trust each other, and how to get creative at solving the problem. They are learning moments and help our relationship grow stronger.

Related reading : Words of encouragement for kids that can lift spirits

What to say to your toddler instead of No

10 Tried and true tips for dealing with the terrible twos

55 Fun questions to ask kids and really connect with them

Follow me on Instagram for more Gentle parenting advice and Motherhood encouragement.

Do you face any of the challenging situations I mentioned here with your toddler? How do you manage the situation?

I hope this post inspires you to try a more creative approach to handle toddler tantrums.