MilestonePractical· 4mo–8mo

Communicating Food Refusal

Uses clear signals to indicate fullness or refusal of food

Medium (60%)
Connected0 related · 4 prereq

What the research says

Referenced across 1 developmental framework: cdc_milestones

Full quotes, source languages, and document links coming soon as we finish the source-evidence indexing pass.

Before this (4)

Required (1)

Helpful (1)

How it's taught

cdc_milestones

Watch for and respect baby's fullness cues; stop feeding when baby shows refusal; learn baby's individual signals; don't force feeding; talk with doctor about when to start solids

Materials: No special materials needed; occurs during feeding routines

What mastery looks like

Not yet

Does not show clear signals of food refusal

  • Continues to accept food even when full
  • No clear refusal behaviors
  • Caregiver must guess when baby is full
Emerging

Beginning to show some refusal behaviors

  • Sometimes turns head away from food
  • May become fussy when full
  • Signals are inconsistent or unclear
Developing

Shows clear refusal behaviors

  • Closes lips to show she doesn't want more food
  • Turns head away from breast/bottle/spoon
  • May push food away
  • Shows consistent refusal signals
Secure

Consistently communicates food refusal clearly

  • Closes lips to show doesn't want more food consistently
  • Uses multiple signals (closing mouth, turning away, pushing)
  • Signals are clear and easy for caregiver to read
  • Shows refusal before becoming distressed
Reflexive

Uses sophisticated communication about food preferences and fullness

  • Differentiates between 'no more' and 'not this food'
  • May show interest in different foods while refusing current one
  • Communicates fullness early in feeding process
  • Uses varied signals based on context

Activities for this (1)

Formal assessments

No matching assessment items indexed yet.