Musical instrument exploration
6–12 monthsSuccess MindsetMaterials: Baby shakers
Pot and wooden spoon
Bells
Toy xylophone
Introduce your child to simple musical instruments or sound-making objects. Try shakers, drums made from pots, bells, or xylophones. Let them bang, shake, and explore how to make different sounds. Show them how you create sounds, then step back and let them experiment. Even accidental discoveries about cause and effect build curiosity and problem-solving skills at this age.
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How to Do This Activity
Introduce your child to simple musical instruments or sound-making objects. Try shakers, drums made from pots, bells, or xylophones. Let them bang, shake, and explore how to make different sounds. Show them how you create sounds, then step back and let them experiment. Even accidental discoveries about cause and effect build curiosity and problem-solving skills at this age.
Why It Works
Sound exploration activates curiosity pathways in the brain and supports cause-and-effect learning, which is emerging at this developmental stage (Gruber et al., 2014). Infants are motivated to repeat actions that produce interesting results, building both motor skills and cognitive understanding. Musical exploration engages auditory processing and encourages experimentation, key components of developing curiosity and openness to experience.
Tips for Parents
Choose instruments without small parts that could pose choking hazards.
Demonstrate once, then let your child explore without constant instruction.
Join in the music-making to share the joy of discovery together.
Materials Needed
Baby shakers
Pot and wooden spoon
Bells
Toy xylophone
Learning Methods
Sensory ExplorationMovement-Based Learning
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