Turn-Taking Impulse Control
Child can wait for their turn in activities, showing emerging impulse control
What the research says
Referenced across 1 developmental framework: asq_3
Full quotes, source languages, and document links coming soon as we finish the source-evidence indexing pass.
Activities for this (8)
Your Turn, My Turn — The Sharing Game
Parent and preschooler play structured games that require turn-taking — rolling a ball, building together, or a simple card game. Agent guides parent to observe waiting ability, sharing, empathy, and social regulation during interactive play.
Kitchen Band Turn-Taking Jam
Red Light, Green Light with a Twist
Memory Board Game
Parent and child create a homemade memory matching game using simple materials, then play together. The agent coaches the parent to observe the child's problem-solving strategies, turn-taking skills, and perspective-taking abilities — building cognitive flexibility and executive function through playful collaboration.
Memory Board Game
Parent and child create a homemade memory matching game using simple materials, then play together. The agent coaches the parent to observe the child's problem-solving strategies, rule-following, and collaborative play skills — building cognitive flexibility and executive function through game creation and play.
Make it up! III
To enhance your little one's conversational skills and creativity by making up a story together and acting it out.
Basketball Sharing II
Invite at least one of your child's friends. Play together to throw, catch, and score baskets. First, practice catching with hands only. Then, challenge them to score 5 baskets together. Observe how your child cooperates, takes turns, and shares the ball. Keep it fun!
Share and kick! II
To encourage your child to share and autoregulate when playing with their friends.
Formal assessments
No matching assessment items indexed yet.