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28 answers

There is no correlation

2006-09-16 13:26:06 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

No. I walked before I crawled and graduated #2 out of 500 students.

2006-09-16 15:17:49 · answer #2 · answered by Jessica 3 · 0 0

Crawling is important for brain development and coordination. My local Child and Youth Health stress the importance of babies crawling at some point (whether before or after walking) so much that they refer you to a free physio to teach the baby how to crawl if they walk first.

Walking without crawling (according to Child and Youth Health) is linked with higher rates of learning disorders... hence some link with not reading well in some children.

2006-09-16 14:49:07 · answer #3 · answered by EC Mama 3 · 1 1

I know that my sister didn't really crawl. She just started walking one day. She is a freaking genius who is in med school now. She can read better than all of us. So if it's true, then I would say that it ISN'T ALL the time.

2006-09-16 13:57:04 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No that isn't true. It is just an old wives tale. My oldest son, who is 10 is in the 6th grade, and he has just been tested by John Hopkins late this summer, and he has tested out of high school level for reading and science, and is on 11th grade level for math. And he never crawled - nor is he dyslexic either.

2006-09-16 16:11:02 · answer #5 · answered by jensantosleon 3 · 0 0

No. I was reading at age two. Reading signs before that. Got 99 % on all sections of all standardized tests taken till sixth grade. Could go on but that's enough there probably.

Some say it is a sign of a possible learning disorder though. That I do have.

2006-09-16 13:51:08 · answer #6 · answered by *babydoll* 6 · 0 0

NO-that is a load of b-s. I never crawled as a child-went straight to walking, and I can read very well. AND I got straight A's in highschool.

2006-09-16 14:00:48 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, there are exceptions, but it CAN be true. It is best if children crawl first. If your child walked first, play crawling games with him/her so that the crawling "pattern" is completed. This will help.

2006-09-16 13:58:48 · answer #8 · answered by Wiser1 6 · 1 0

crawling is a crucial developmental area it is not merely a thank you to head around until eventually the toddler learns to stroll... it calls for specific coordination qualifications and if the baby skips it it is not a good component, it would advise heshe lacks those qualifications and isn't engaged on bobbing up them.. and confident i've got examine greater suitable than as quickly as that skipping it fairly is linked with specific disabilities like a prior answer suggested.. deliver it to recommendations would and not inevitably advise there's a disability ... you cant coach or rigidity a baby to pass slowly i assume , I say seek for suggestion from a professional and don't have faith in our solutions as we are purely telling you what we would have examine or heard, and save what he tells you in recommendations until eventually your toddler is sufficiently outdated to be examined.

2016-12-15 09:07:31 · answer #9 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

No it is not true,did you know that all human`s are natural astronauts,we float around in a waitless enviorment for 9 month`s and that we are natural swimmer`s too?

2006-09-16 13:40:52 · answer #10 · answered by krusty_blue_spaz 5 · 0 0

I would say it's not true in all cases, but certainly possible. Babies need to go through every stage of developement in order for brain neurons to connect. But if a step is 'skipped' it's not a given that they WON't read well.
Continue to read daily to your child, interact with him/her and the book alot. Sing ABC's with them, and play play play. Balance is also important. Some children's motor skills are more developed than others. The important thing is to continue to interact and talk to your child.

2006-09-16 13:29:54 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 3 2

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