Learning to see - Infant vision

Your baby has a whole lifetime to see and learn. But, did you know that your baby also has to learn to see?

Your baby has a whole lifetime to see and learn. But, did you know that your baby also has to learn to see? As a parent, there are many things that you can do to help your baby's vision develop.  First, proper prenatal care and nutrition can help your baby's eyes develop even before birth. At birth, your baby's eyes should be examined for signs of congenital eye conditions. These are rare, but early diagnosis and treatment are important to your child's development.

At about age six months, you should take your baby to your optometrist for his or her first thorough eye examination. Things that the optometrist will test for include excessive or unequal amounts of nearsightedness, farsightedness or astigmatism and eye movement ability as well as eye health problems. These problems are not common, but it is important to identify children who have it at this stage. Visual development and eye health problems can be more easily corrected if treatment starts early.

Unless you notice a need, or your optometrist advises you otherwise, your child's next examination should be around age three, and then again before he or she starts school at about six years.

Between birth and age three, when many of your baby's visual skills will develop, there are ways that you can help.

During the first four months of life, your baby should begin to follow moving objects with the eyes and reach for things.  First by chance and later more accurately.  As hand-eye coordination and depth perception begin to develop, this will improve.

To help with this development, use a nightlight or other dim lamp in your baby's room; change the crib's position frequently as well as your child's position in it.  Keep reach-and-touch toys within your baby's focus, about eight to twelve inches.  Talk to your baby as you walk around the room.  Alternate right and left sides with each feeding, and hang a mobile above and outside the crib.

Between four and eight months:  Your baby should begin to turn from side to side and use his or her arms and legs. Eye movement and eye-body coordination skills should develop further and both eyes should focus equally.

You should enable your baby to explore different shapes and textures with his or her fingers.  Give your baby the freedom to crawl and explore.  Hang objects across the crib and play  "peek-a-boo" with your baby.

From eight to twelve months:  Your baby should be mobile now, crawling and pulling himself or herself up. He or she will begin to use both eyes together and judge distances and grasp and throw objects with greater precision. To support development don't encourage early walking - crawling is important in developing eye-hand-foot-body coordination.  Give your baby stacking and take-apart toys and provide objects your baby can touch, hold and see at the same time.

From one to two years, your child's eye-hand coordination and depth perception will continue to develop and he or she will begin to understand abstract terms. Things you can do are:

       Encourage walking;

       Provide building blocks

       Assemble simple puzzles

       Play with balls

       Provide opportunities to climb and explore in and outdoors.

There are many other affectionate and loving ways in which you can aid your baby's visual development. Use your creativity and imagination. Ask your optometrist to suggest other specific activities.

Learning to see - Infant vision
Administrator August 23, 2023
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