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Every Milestone has Meaning

Milestones are important when it comes to feeding, as your child's needs change with every developmental stage. Select the Milestone Symbol™ below that reflects your child’s current stage of development to receive customized feeding guidelines, menus and nutrition advice tailored to your child's individual readiness cues and motor skills.

Select a Milestone

Pregnancy

  • 1st Trimester
  • 2nd Trimester
  • 3rd Trimester
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Every Milestone has Meaning

Milestones are important when it comes to feeding, as your child's needs change with every developmental stage. Select the Milestone Symbol™ below that reflects your child’s current stage of development to receive customized feeding guidelines, menus and nutrition advice tailored to your child's individual readiness cues and motor skills.

Select a Milestone

Birth

  • Makes crawling-type motions with her legs
  • Enjoys bold colors as vision continues to develop
  • Smiles, frowns and grimaces
  • Reaches for you when she wants attention
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Every Milestone has Meaning

Milestones are important when it comes to feeding, as your child's needs change with every developmental stage. Select the Milestone Symbol™ below that reflects your child’s current stage of development to receive customized feeding guidelines, menus and nutrition advice tailored to your child's individual readiness cues and motor skills.

Select a Milestone

Crawler

  • Crawls with stomach off the floor
  • May pull self up to stand
  • Begins to self-feed with fingers
  • Begins to use jaw to mash food

Supported Sitter

  • Sits with help or support
  • On tummy, pushes up on arms with straight elbows
  • Moves pureed food forward and backward in mouth with tongue to swallow

Sitter

  • Sits independently
  • Picks up and holds small objects in hands
  • Reaches for food or spoon when hungry
  • Uses upper lip to help clear food off of spoon
Close

Every Milestone has Meaning

Milestones are important when it comes to feeding, as your child's needs change with every developmental stage. Select the Milestone Symbol™ below that reflects your child’s current stage of development to receive customized feeding guidelines, menus and nutrition advice tailored to your child's individual readiness cues and motor skills.

Select a Milestone

Crawler

  • Crawls with stomach off the floor
  • May pull self up to stand
  • Begins to self-feed with fingers
  • Begins to use jaw to mash food

Toddler

  • Stands alone and begins to walk alone
  • Feeds self easily with fingers
  • Begins to use fork and spoon
  • Bites through a variety of textures
Close

Every Milestone has Meaning

Milestones are important when it comes to feeding, as your child's needs change with every developmental stage. Select the Milestone Symbol™ below that reflects your child’s current stage of development to receive customized feeding guidelines, menus and nutrition advice tailored to your child's individual readiness cues and motor skills.

Select a Milestone

Preschooler

  • Runs well without falling
  • Sits in a booster seat or child seat at family meals
  • Chews more skillfully and efficiently
  • Mastering use of spoon and fork
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Enroll a friend Start Healthy, Stay Healthy Nutrition Guide

4 toddler-feeding tips

4 toddler-feeding tips

To better understand toddlers’ eating habits, Gerber sponsored The Feeding Infants and Toddlers Study (FITS). Knowing what toddlers were really eating taught us how to better guide their food choices. Keep these in mind:

  1. Choose foods wisely
    As your toddler transitions off breastmilk or formula, nutrition gaps become more common. It’s important to choose lots of fruits, veggies, whole grains, lean meats, and dairy foods–all of these contribute important nutrients needed for healthy growth and development.
  2. Snack smart
    Toddlers typically get 25% of calories from snacks, so it’s important to make every bite count. Leave foods high in calories and low in nutrients (chips, cookies, and sugary drinks) to an occasional treat. Instead serve your toddler fruits and vegetables such as GRADUATES Fruit and Vegetable Dices.

  3. Drink responsibly
    Beverages are important for hydration, but too many can make your toddler too full to eat nutritious foods. Limit milk to about 2 cups per day. If your toddler doesn’t like the taste of milk, try NESTLÉ® GOOD START® 2 formula instead. Also offer water and up to 4 to 6 fluid ounces of 100% fruit juice for one fruit serving.1 Avoid sugar-sweetened and artificially sweetened beverages. Try GRADUATES® FRUIT SPLASHERS® purified water with real fruit juice that has 40% less sugar than the leading 100% fruit juice.2

  4. Serve healthy fats
    Healthy fats are important for growth and brain development. Studies show that 1/3 of toddlers don’t get enough alpha linolenic omega-3 essential fatty acid, and many don’t get enough of the antioxidant vitamin E found in fats. Try preparing foods with 1 tablespoon soy or canola oil, and avoid foods high in saturated and trans fats. You can also serve GRADUATES® LIL’ STICKS™ meat or poultry sticks with 70 milligrams omega-3 essential fatty acids per serving.

1 One of your toddler’s servings of fruits and vegetables can come from 4 ounces of 100% juice. Other servings should be from whole, peeled fruit that’s mashed or pureed.
2 GRADUATES® FRUIT SPLASHERS® beverage has 15 grams of sugar per 8-fluid-ounce serving compared to 27 grams of sugar per 8-fluid-ounce serving of 100% apple juice.

Products

GERBER<sup>®</sup> GRADUATES<sup>®</sup> FRUIT SPLASHERS<sup>®</sup> Beverages

GERBER® GRADUATES® FRUIT SPLASHERS® Beverages

100% daily value vitamin C, made with 100% real fruit juice.

Learn More