Skill

Shows Confidence in Own Abilities

Toddler shows and shares new skills, seeking encouragement from familiar people.

Ages 6–36 months

Why it matters

Confidence grows when a child tries something, succeeds, and shares it with a caring adult who delights in them. Showing "look what I can do" and attempting things by oneself builds the agency and persistence behind lifelong learning.

Builds toward this milestone

  • shows confidence in own abilities through relationships with others. — Head Start ELOF

Explore milestones →

What mastery looks like

  • Draws an adult's attention to a new skill or accomplishment and attends to their response.
  • Attempts tasks independently, such as putting on a jacket or pouring from a small pitcher.

How to observe it

  • Does the child seek out an adult to show a new skill?
  • Does the child try to do things by themselves and show pride when they succeed?

Accessibility

  • Celebrate effort and attempts, not just success, with specific warm feedback.
  • Offer "just-right" challenges and adapted tools so every child can experience mastery.

Activities

Evidence