This film shows a series of tests which were run on a white male baby at the ages of one, two, three, and six years of age to test the boy's mental, cognitive, and motor skills. When the child was one-year old, blocks were placed in front of him. He pushed and pounded them on the table. He was also given a cup, rattle, and bell which he pushed and pounded on the table. The last test showed the nurse trying unsuccessfully to get the child to stand upright on his own. When the child was two-years-old, blocks were placed in front of him and he threw them into a bowl. Then the doctor showed the child how to ring a bell; however, the child did not imitate the action. He was able to sit upright in the crib without assistance. When the child was three, he stacked blocks one on top of the other, used the cup to store blocks, and rang the bell following the doctor's example. The child also walked for the first time. At six years of age, he put blocks and the cup in his mouth repeatedly. Later, he removed a pea from a small-necked bottle and returned it to its orignal position, then continued to remove and replace the pea from the bottle for an extended period of time.
Copyright:
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Copyright Holder:
Yale University Clinic of Child Development; Source: Item; Research date: 11/03/2011
Extent:
011 min.
Color:
Black and white
Sound:
Silent
Credits:
Arnold Gesell.
Provenance:
Received: June 23, 1989 as a donation from the Gesell Institute of Human Development.