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Toddler nutrition and fitness: in a nutshell

By Raising Children Network
 
 

Parents can help children learn to love good food.

Toddler eating a banana
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Children watch what you are eating. So you can help them adopt good eating habits by eating well yourself. If you load up with hot chips and cola, that’s what they will want too.

Some children reject a new food 6-10 times before they taste it and love it. Eat it enthusiastically yourself and, if it is still rejected, try it with your child again in a few weeks or a few months. There is no hurry but don’t give up as her tastes can change. Find out more about offering new foods.

Healthy food for toddlers

  • Healthy eating contains guidelines and practical tools to help you ensure your child eats good food.
  • For good food made easy, try these finger foods for toddlers.
  • Pack a goodness punch by including lots of your child’s nutritional needs in one dish. Try Everything fried rice, an omelette with the lot, shepherd’s pie, baked beans on wholegrain toast or pasta bolognaise with a meat and vegie sauce.

For more on good food, read Choosing good food 

Toddler exercise

Encourage your child to be physically active and you're helping to establish a healthy lifelong habit. Exercise gives your toddler strong bones and muscles, a healthy heart, lungs and arteries, and improved coordination, balance, posture and flexibility. It reduces the risk of her becoming overweight or obese and of developing heart disease, cancer or diabetes down the track.

Being overweight is unhealthy and uncomfortable – and very unpleasant for a young child. Helping your children develop healthy eating habits will help them avoid falling into the trap of child obesity. Try limiting snacks such as salty chips, especially while watching TV; you can even keep TV time to 30 minutes followed by an outdoor activity (like a walk to the park).

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  • Newsletter snippet: Toddler nutrition and fitness: in a nutshell

     

    By Raising Children Network

    You can help your child adopt healthy eating habits and enjoy being physically active.

    • Set a good example by eating well yourself.
    • Persevere when offering new food to your toddler – you might have to try many times.
    • Try finger foods or a single dish packed with all your child’s nutritional needs.
    • Encourage your child to be physically active.
    • Exercise promotes strong bones and muscles; a healthy heart, lungs and arteries; and improved coordination and flexibility.
    • Remember that eating unhealthy food while watching TV can lead to child obesity.
    • Try limiting TV time to 30 minutes, followed by an outdoor activity.

    This article is an extract only. For more information, visit  raisingchildren.net.au/nutrition__fitness/toddlers_nutrition.html.

    Sourced from the Raising Children Network's comprehensive and quality-assured Australian parenting website www.raisingchildren.net.au.

 
 
 
  • Last reviewed17-05-2006