Promoting independence with dressing skills builds your child’s self-esteem, confidence, and independence; playing dress-up is a great way to strengthen all of the skills required to dress and undress oneself!
Did you know that children begin to demonstrate dressing skills as early as one year old?
Below is the developmental dressing skills timeline. Depending on your child and their abilities, the timeline might be different for your child – and that’s okay. Keep in mind these are general guidelines only, use them to determine your child’s readiness for dressing independently.
One-Year-Old |
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Two-Year-Old |
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Three-Year-Old |
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Four-Year-Old |
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Five-Year-Old |
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Six-Year-Old |
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Dressing can be a complex activity, as your child needs to be able to master a number of skills. These include:
Playing dress-up can be used to develop independent dressing skills by allowing your child to develop and practice the above-mentioned skills. Your child can use dress-up costumes or have a fashion show, to turn dressing practice into playtime! In addition, playing dress-up encourages creativity, imagination, and fun.
Keep a box of dress-up clothes and encourage your child to put on and take off shirts, dresses, pants, capes, hats, scarves, shoes, costumes, and accessories. Bigger clothes are great for practicing the motions needed for dressing, without the resistance of elastic or tight-fitting items. Be sure to include items with different types of fasteners to add a challenge. Hanging a mirror at your child’s height can help them see what’s happening, help them track their own progress and allow them to marvel at their own creativity.
Being able to get dressed independently takes lots of practice, experience, and play to get there. Taking the time to play dress-up can help your child make the connections and motor-planning skills needed to succeed.