Little Dragons, Big Steps

Supporting independence in our youngest learners

At some point in their Red Room journey, most children will experience their first birthday — a milestone that often brings an exciting developmental shift. Around this time, children begin to recognize themselves as individuals with their own ideas, preferences, and abilities.

💡 A Powerful Developmental Shift

Children begin to want to walk instead of being carried
by an adult, feed themselves rather than be helped,
or communicate their preferences clearly —
sometimes with an enthusiastic (and repeated) ‘no!’

infant teaching staff

This growing awareness often shows up as a strong desire to do things independently, reflecting healthy emotional and cognitive development. As motor skills improve, toddlers are motivated to explore their environment, practicing new abilities.

Self-feeding helps build their coordination and confidence — even when it’s messy!

🌟 Why Independence Matters

These behaviors are signs of healthy development. Saying “no” is one of the first ways toddlers learn to express autonomy and communicate boundaries — not defiance.

🙌 How Families Can Support This Stage

Families can nurture this exciting phase by encouraging independence while remaining emotionally available and supportive.

Simple ways to encourage independence at home:

  • Offer safe opportunities for exploration
  • Allow extra time for self-feeding or movement
  • Provide clear choices to empower decision-making
  • Respond calmly to boundary-testing moments
  • Celebrate effort, not just success

See Early Learning in Action

Discover how our nurturing classrooms support every stage of development — from first steps to confident exploration.

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