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An Eisenberg and Hathaway book, What to Expect the Toddler Years will help you to better understand your tiny tot. Comprehensively written, this book on childcare covers all t...Read more
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Very Helpful Series
I loved What to Expect When You're Expecting and What to Expect the First Year so it only seemed logical that I buy What to Expect the Toddler Years when my daughter turned 1....Read more
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What to expect the toddler's years
Just as the "What to Expect when your Expecting" it is very helpful guide to your toddler's first couple of years. I love the whole collection and my favorite part i...Read more

What to Expect the Toddler Years by Arlene Eisenberg, Sandee E. Hathaway and Heidi Eisenberg Murkoff (1994, Paperback)

Author: Heidi Eisenberg Murkoff, Arlene Eisenberg, Sandee E. Hathaway | Publisher: Workman Pub Co | Format: Paperback

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Synopsis
An Eisenberg and Hathaway book, What to Expect the Toddler Years will help you to better understand your tiny tot. Comprehensively written, this book on childcare covers all the aspects you were unsure about, including eating and sleeping problems, tantrums, bottle mouth, and shyness. This Eisenberg and Hathaway book is organized month by month for the second year (months 12-24) and quarterly through the third year (months 24-36) to facilitate your learning experience. Moreover, this book on childcare covers topics including toilet training, safety, health, siblings, and balancing work and parenting. So, rest assured your parenting will be smooth sailing, with What to Expect the Toddler Years.

Key Details
Author:Heidi Eisenberg Murkoff, Arlene Eisenberg, Sandee E. Hathaway
Publisher:Workman Pub Co
Format:Paperback
ISBN-10:0894809946
ISBN-13:9780894809941

Publisher's Note
They guided you through pregnancy, they guided you through baby's first year, and now they'll guide you through the toddler years. In a direct continuation of What to Expect When You're Expecting (over 9.6 million copies in print) and What to Expect the First Year (over 5.6 million copies in print), America's bestselling pregnancy and childcare authors turn their uniquely comprehensive, lively, and reassuring coverage to years two and three.

Organized month by month for the second year (months 12-24) and quarterly through the third year (months 24-36), What to Expect the Toddler Years covers each growth and development phase parents are likely to encounter-when they're likely to encounter it. Hundreds of questions and answers treat everything from eating and sleeping problems to day care, tantrums, bottle mouth, shyness, self-esteem, and more. An entire third section of the book is devoted to toilet training, safety, and health, and a fourth covers special concerns-the exceptional child, siblings, and balancing work and parenting.

Remarkably thorough, caring and intelligent, What to Expect the Toddler Years is as valuable for the seasoned parent as it is for the new parent. 2.4 million copies in print.

eBay Product ID: EPID436995
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What to Expect the Toddler Years by Arlene Eisenberg, Sandee E. Hathaway and Heidi Eisenberg Murkoff (1994, Paperback)
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Very Helpful Series

Created: 03/11/08
I loved What to Expect When You're Expecting and What to Expect the First Year so it only seemed logical that I buy What to Expect the Toddler Years when my daughter turned 1. As with any parenting book, you have to take all the information in it and apply it to you, your child and your life. No book has all the answers. But this series comes close! What I love is that both sides of most concerns are presented (my child eats too much and my child doens't eat enough). I also appreciate that it includes common worries (how to boost language) as well as more obscure problems (pigeon-toes) that often end up not being as obscure as I thought! This is a wonderful book for first-time parents, grandparents, day-care providers, etc... A very practical guide to what to expect from your child.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.
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What to expect the toddler's years

Created: 10/09/10
Just as the "What to Expect when your Expecting" it is very helpful guide to your toddler's first couple of years. I love the whole collection and my favorite part is the section on when your baby is sick. The only bad thing I can really say about it is that nobody should LIVE by the expectations of the book. Every baby is different and I mean EVERY baby. The book does mention that but really doesn't stress enough. It should only be used to get an idea of SOME of the milestones your child COULD be at. Some baby's are far more advanced and some don't even say their first word until they are 3 or 4 years old and that doesn't mean anything is wrong with them or that you need a specialist which a LOT of people would argue me about. Be proud your baby isn't average. Your baby may excel in other areas far faster then the average child may. My cousin didn't walk until he was 20 months old, or speak until he was 3, However he would draw pictures you wouldn't believe came from a toddler with depth perception and they thought he was Autistic and he is anything but. Now he play's football for the Bills and has an I.Q. of 143 and a Master's in Psychology. If that give's any frustrated parents comfort. Even if they don't speak that does not mean they don't understand every word out of your mouth so be careful what you say :) The book should only be used as a reference, not as a comparison guide. I know it's hard to see younger kids pass your baby by on the milestones they have in this book but just enjoy these years because they'll be talking your ear off soon enough and running circles around you Lol. As for the baby's that do have things like autism or mental growth development peoblems this book also has helpful sections on that too and EVERYTHING you read in the book should always be ran by your pediatrician. Hope you enjoy it as much as I do :)
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Not impressed with the information the book provides

Created: 23/06/10
I really enjoyed the What to Expect when Expecting and What to Expect the first year but I have a few issues with this book. I Don't like the fact that it doesn't give alternatives views on different types of parenting; on MOST things it seems to be biased and caters to the western culture we live in in the US which has a very different parenting style than nations around the world. I also didn't like the fact that it pretty much blatantly discouraged breastfeeding past one year of age. It had little advantages listed, and did not reference the studies that I have researched myself and know to be true about the benefits of extended breastfeeding (like immunities and the fact that in studies the children who breastfeed the longest are on average smarter and healthier the longer they breastfeed). The child-self weaning is pretty much absent. There are other things like cry it out method and such that I don't agree with. While I realize this is just my opinion, I think the book should offer alternative lines of thinking for parenting. I think things that are medically sound for the children should be outlined in the book- like the fact that extended periods of time of crying can cause increased blood pressure and stress hormones in the body and in extreme cases brain damage. I think this info should be presented to all parents so they can make informed decisions. Instead, all the book has is what to do once your child has already been traumatized by cry it out episodes (it suggests not making them cry it out anymore! Why Risk it in the first place?) The authors seem to cater very much to this western concept that babies need to be independent as soon as possible instead of caring about what the child wants and any type of attached parenting. About the only benefit I see is just having the guidelines on what, on average, my child should be doing at what age. Other than that I find it one sided on the information and have much better success researching on my own on subject matters.
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what to expect the toddler years

Created: 08/04/09
I bought the book " what to expect the toddler years" by Arlene Eisenberg" Two weeks ago and was immediately impressed with the features in this book. It has facts about toddler development, list of things your child should be able to do at the age, and countless guides for traveling,injuries, simple health problems. This book is perfect for quick reference and great for extended research.it also has a easy view chart of symptoms and illnesses so you can pen point a possible problem your toddler might be having.

this book is full of lots of great information and helps track your childs development. i would definatly recommend it for family and friends with toddlers.
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Great book when you have questions!

Created: 03/02/08
I had purchased What To Expect When You're Expecting and The First Year and those both were such great tool for me. When I had questions or wanted to know what would be happening each month, I had tons of answers. This book is the same as the others. Lots of information for someone who is a first time mom and wants to know everything. Not every pregnancy and child is the same and this book tells you that. Not everyone follows the same growth rate or walks or talks in the same time period. I would recommend to anyone and have.
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