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Let your child have a choice when possible. For example, say, "Do you want a banana or an orange?"
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Let your child help around the house, such as dusting, sweeping, or sorting laundry.
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Read picture and story books with your child.
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Help your child learn to wash their hands.
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Let your child try to take off their own clothes and put on some simple clothes, such as clothes without buttons or zippers.
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Let your child play with blocks, balls, crayons, or clay. Supervise play so that your child doesn't put objects in their mouth or ears.
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Sing songs, play children's music, and dance with your child.
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Look at family pictures with your child and tell a story.
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Make cut-outs in a large cardboard box to pretend it is a house or car.
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Use toys during bath time, or have fun pouring water from one cup to another.
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Let your child talk on a toy phone, or say a few words while you are talking on a real phone.
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Play "follow the leader" games.
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Teach body parts while dressing and bathing.
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Let your child put stickers on paper to make a design.
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Count things out loud to teach your child about numbers, such as count eggs in the carton, stairs as you go up, or fingers and toes.
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Play with soap bubbles.
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Use toys that sort shapes, such as a circle, square, or triangle.
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Give your child a doll or teddy bear.
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Read your child a book of rhymes.
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Give your child a toy to ride.
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Limit TV and other screen time (tablets, phones) to no more than 1 hour a day.
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Provide social experiences outside the home.