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January 29, 2011

Your pregnancy: 33 weeks

Here is how she looks at 33 weeks along...

How your baby's growing:

This week your baby weighs a little over 4 pounds (heft a pineapple) and has passed the 17-inch mark. He's rapidly losing that wrinkled, alien look and his skeleton is hardening. The bones in his skull aren't fused together, which allows them to move and slightly overlap, thus making it easier for him to fit through the birth canal. (The pressure on the head during birth is so intense that many babies are born with a conehead-like appearance.) These bones don't entirely fuse until early adulthood, so they can grow as his brain and other tissue expands during infancy and childhood.

Your Preschooler at 30 Months...

Development (29 to 30 months)...

Milestones:

By now your child should be able to put on an article of clothing and name about six body parts. She might also be able to balance on one foot for a couple of seconds or identify one color.

Greater curiosity about others:

At this age, she might be able to identify one friend by name. And as she grows more aware of what others are thinking and feeling, she'll become more interested in playing with other children.

Encouraging creativity:

Messiness is an integral part of children's artistic play, so don't worry about the disorder and clutter that seem to go hand in hand with her creative endeavors. When she's done with a project, you can teach her that cleaning up is part of the game. Even though her artwork might not look like anything but scribbles, admire and respect it and you'll give her the confidence to keep expressing herself.

Talking to your toddler:

You can help build your toddler's verbal skills by expanding on what she says. For instance, if she says "Car go," you might say "Yes, that red car is going down the street very quickly." Model the bigger vocabulary and more complicated sentence structure she'll grow into shortly.

Toilet training:

If you've already started toilet training and have questions about the ins and outs (outs, really) of the process, take a look at our toilet training center. If you haven't started yet, that's okay. Many children, especially boys, aren't quite ready for the potty. Keep watching for the signs of readiness.

Angie Green (angeluv42) on Twitter

Angie Green (angeluv42) on Twitter

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