Skill

Seeks Help from Adults

Infant or toddler communicates needs and asks familiar adults for help.

Ages 6–36 months

Why it matters

Learning to use an adult as a resource — through crying, pointing, leading, or words — builds the child's sense that they can act on the world and get needs met. It is the root of help-seeking, communication, and growing independence.

Builds toward this milestone

  • learns to use adults as a resource to meet needs. — Head Start ELOF

Explore milestones →

What mastery looks like

  • Communicates a need with a behavior such as crying, reaching, pointing, leading, or words.
  • Seeks a familiar adult's help with a difficult task or situation.

How to observe it

  • When the child wants something out of reach, do they signal or ask an adult?
  • Does the child take an adult's hand or lead them to what they need?

Accessibility

  • Accept any communication mode — gesture, sign, picture cards, vocalizations, or words.
  • Respond consistently to early signals so the child learns help-seeking pays off.

Activities

Evidence