Ellyn Satter
Feeding Relationship Training Modules
1. NUTRITION AND FEEDING
FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN
BASIC NUTRITION AND FEEDING (0-5 years)
- Being a Role Model for Your Child’s Eating
- Helping Your Child to Eat Well
- Meals for Children
- The Food Guide Pyramid
- Snacks for Children
- Feeding Children Safely
- Should Your Child Drink Milk?
- Calcium: If Your Child Doesn’t Drink Milk
- Lactose Intolerance
- Iron in Your Child’s Diet
- Sugar in Your Child’s Diet
- Vitamins and Minerals for Children
- Vegetarianism
- Cooking in a Hurry
- Family Meals in Restaurants
- Is Fast Food Good Food?
INFANT (0-6 months) AND OLDER BABY (6-12 months)
- Should Your Baby Have a Schedule? (0-3 months)
- Should Your Baby Have a Schedule? (3-6 months)
- What is Normal Growth? (0-36 months)
- What Foods Should You Give Your Baby? (0-12 months)
- Breast or Bottle? (0-3 months)
- Breastfeeding Your Baby (0-3 months)
- Breastfeeding Your Baby (3-6 months)
- Bottle-Feeding Formula and Equipment
- Bottle-Feeding Your Baby (0-3 months)
- Bottle-Feeding Your Baby (3-6 months)
- How Much Should Your Baby Eat? (0-3 months)
- How Much Should Your Baby Eat? (3-6 months)
- How Much Should Your Baby Eat? (6-12 months)
- Is Your Baby Ready for Solid Foods? (0-3 months)
- Starting Your Baby on Solid Foods
- How Your Baby Learns to Eat Solid Foods (6-12 months)
- Selecting Solid Foods for Your Baby
- Weaning Your Baby
- Feeding the Premature Baby
- If Your Baby Doesn’t Eat Enough (0-6 months)
- If Your Baby Doesn’t Eat Enough (6-12 months)
- If Your Baby Seems Fat (0-6 months)
- If Your Baby Seems Fat (6-12 months)
- Why Is Your Baby Gaining Too Much Weight? (0-6 months)
- Why Is Your Baby Gaining Too Much Weight? (6-12 months)
TODDLER AND PRESCHOOL (1-5 years)
- What Is Normal Growth (2-5 years)
- How to Feed Your Toddler
- How Much Should Your Toddler Eat?
- How to Feed Your Preschooler
- How Much Should Your Preschooler Eat?
- What to Feed Your Toddler and Preschooler
- If Your Child Is Finicky
- If Your Child Won’t Eat Vegetables
- Should Your Child Have Dessert?
- If Your Toddler or Preschooler Doesn’t Eat Enough
- If Your Toddler or Preschooler Eats Too Much
- If Your Toddler Seems Fat
- Why Is Your Toddler Gaining Too Much Weight?
- Why Is Your Preschooler Gaining Too Much Weight?
2. FEEDING IN PRIMARY CARE
PREGNANCY THROUGH PRESCHOOL
PRENATAL and POSTPARTUM
- Eating for Pregnancy
- Eating after the baby
- Have meals (large picture)
- Have meals (small picture)
- Breastfeeding or formula-feeding?
- Teaching your child to be a good eater
- Cooking in a hurry
- Keeping food safe
- How do you stretch your food money?
- What you like can be good for you
- Fat in family meals
- Are you a vegetarian? Is your child?
- If you or your child don’t eat vegetables
- If you or your child won’t drink milk
- How do you know how much to eat?
- Do you eat too much?
- Moving your body
BABY – NEWBORN AND INFANT
- Understand your newborn
- Understand your infant
- How to feed your baby
- Breastfeeding your baby
- Bottle-feeding your baby
- Bottle-feeding formula and equipment
- Feed based on what your baby can do
- Understand your baby’s sleeping and waking
- What is your baby telling you?
- Your baby’s temperament
- Is your baby too small? Does he not eat enough?
- Is your baby too big? Does she eat too much?
- Teaching your breastfed baby to take a bottle
- Feeding your prematurely born baby
OLDER BABY AND ALMOST-TODDLER
- Understand your older baby
- How to feed your older baby solid foods
- Feed the way your child can eat
- Solid foods, step by step
- Nipple to the cup to the table
- Understand your almost-toddler
- How to feed your almost-toddler
- Making food easy to eat
- Keeping your child from choking
- Giving up the breast or bottle
- Grown-up snacks for children
- Making your own baby food
- Feeding your prematurely born older baby
- Is your child too small? Does he not eat enough?
- Is your child too big? Does she eat too much?
- Feeding your prematurely born almost-toddler
TODDLER AND PRESCHOOLER


The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for New Mexico Women, Infants & Children