8-10 months... I'm honestly afraid I'll get a child that can't self feed at 12 months mostly because at that age they're eating what the older kids eat and there's no way I'm going to hand feed a 1 year old unless there's a medical reason.
Last edited by craftymissbeth; 08-28-2014, 01:56 PM.
Reason: To add
My last one to join the group was 9 months old and completely adult fed baby food when she started. By the end of the second week, she was completely self-feeding. She still needed help with a sippy-cup, but she figured out how to get food from her plate to her face dang quick.
depends on their culture and age. My husband is Asian. His parents feed my niece who lives with them still like a little baby. She is almost 8.
I have kids that are almost 3 that come from the same culture and they can't self feed.
My DCKs all have to self feed by hand or spoon, or I will not enroll...
But I only take youngest at 16months if I really really need to.
Not all Asians do this; my Japanese parents always wanted their kids independent and most of mine could hand feed themselves between 10 months & a year old... the Chinese moms, yeah they pamper excessively; I had one kid carried everywhere and was still fed by mom & dad at 18 months old because she got too messy otherwise ( their words). I proved to them she could do it by snapping a pic one day at lunch.
They were still planning on feeding her at home... she aged out 3 months later
It definitely can be cultural, but it could also be a family preference. As much as most Americans value independence, not all do, and people with different backgrounds don't always either.
That said, unless a child has been taught to rely on others to feed him, I expect them to start self-feeding somewhere between 10-12 months.
Also 8-12 months, depends on the kid. It also depends how much formula / breastmilk they are drinking. I've had some kids as old as 15 months still pretty exclusively on milk, and others at 6 months feed themselves everything with maybe 1 bottle a day.
For me, it's not necessarily their age, but if they have met certain criteria- they can sit up on their own, they are introduced to foods, and they have teeth, although, if they are late to get teeth, they can certainly gum some things. I think certainly by about 9 or 10 months they should be able to feed themselves some things and by a year, they should pretty much be able to eat everything the other kids are, just cut up smaller. However, no 2 babies are alike so you have to make sure that you go along with their capabilities. Some babies will be a lot sooner, some a little later if they have some coordination issues.
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