how are babies made
Visiting website CYH Home Child and Family Health Service Child health Youth Health Pregnancy Search All Sites Child and family Children Young Pregnancy › › √≥ About stretch marks Addiction - when you can't stop ADHD - How It Can Affect Teens Going to High School Adolescence - What is it? Alcohol - can affect your life - for children The breasts of children - for children who are teenagers Infants - information for girls who are almost teenagers Take care of your skin Chronic fatigue syndrome Dandruff Medicines - information for school children Food disorders - What are they? - information for children Gender (how you behave like a man or a woman) Getting along with your parents Continue with others - relationships and health Getting rid of body hair - for young teenagers Brides and boyfriends Go find out! Go find out! Stay clean! Inhalants - smelling Living through adolescence Parts! Periods - facts and questions Periods - have a period Personal hygiene - caring for your body Pocket money Puberty - child changes, girl changes Puberty - changes in thought The secret boy business - What's wrong with your body? Sexual feelings - information for children Sexual reproduction - how babies are made - for children Smoking and its effects - information for children Body sweating and smell What is puberty? Who says you're overweight? Your hair - a hairy story Zits (acne) Sexual reproduction - how babies are made - for childrenContents When girls and boys arrive at puberty, their bodies begin to change and become more mature. From this moment, if a man and a woman have sex (often called 'making love', or 'sleeping with someone'), the girl may become pregnant, that is. a baby could start growing. a baby begins Sperm is the male seeds that contribute to a new life - the living sperm looks a little like the tadpoles (under a microscope). They form in the tests. When sperm are ejaculated (e.g. ee-jak-u-lay-ted) of the penis during sexual intercourse, swim the vagina (vaj-eye-na), through the cervix (sir-vix), in the uterus (usted-ter-us) and then in the fallopian tubes (fal-o-pe-an) of the female. These sperms seek an egg (or egg) to fertilize. When a female is born, she carries thousands of ova or eggs ready to use when she becomes adult. These are the feminine "semillas" that, together with the sperm, create a new life. Once a month, the female releases an egg (an egg) or sometimes two (ova). If an egg has been released, and the couple has sex, a sperm can join with it, fertilize it and make the first cell of a new baby. Once a sperm has fertilized the egg, no other sperm can enter. For the sperm is like a race and there is only one winner. Ovulation and menstruation [periods] may begin as early as 9 years for some women, but usually start a few years later for most girls. Take a look at this topic in . A female may become pregnant once she starts ovulating. When a girl starts to have periods, it's the sign that she's started ovulating. Young girls are not physically and emotionally able to deal with pregnancy and be a mother until they become young adults. The law: In South Australia it is against the law to have sex when you are under 17. These laws are to protect young people from getting hurt by situations that are not old enough or experienced to handle. the following This fertilized egg is immediately divided into two cells, these cells are divided over and over in the next two days, as the cell group makes its way to the uterus (the matrix). Here it is planted in the lining of the uterus and continues to divide its cells to make billions of new cells. The female is pregnant. The amazing thing is that each of these cells contains the same set of chromosomes or 'planes' that were created to fertilization! More than 9 months, these cells will grow in a new person - a baby. Doctors have different names for this developing baby. When your father's sperm and mom's egg (ovum) were joined, each brought a set of "planes" for what the new baby would be like. When the egg was fertilized and became its first cells, these 'planes' or genes helped decide a lot of things about you, for example child, skin color, eyes, hair, etc. Genes are made of DNA ('de-ox-y-ri-bo-nu-cle-ic acid', if you want the full name). If you could see your genes, they'd look like a DNA necklace. These threads are called 'cromosomas'. Each cell in a human body has 46 chromosomes. That first single cell has 23 chromosomes of mom and 23 of dad, so it may look like mom or dad (or grandparents) and have similar traits, for example, you and dad may have pointed ears, or you and mom can use their noses! (G) Isn't it annoying when people who haven't seen you for a while say things like, "He's got his father's chin," or "he's got Grandma's eyes!" Or you may find it very interesting.) Twins and more sex you are The sex that a baby will be decided when the egg and sperm are joined. Each egg and every sperm have a sexual chromosome. There are two types of sexual chromosomes - X and Y. Can you see why they are called chromosomes x and y? (Hint - look at the image of a male chromosome.) The eggs carry only one X and the sperm carry an X or an Y X+X means the cell will develop in a child. X+Y means it will develop in a child. Once you are born, you will grow into a unique human being - there is no one else like you in the world. Even the identical twins are not exact copies of the other - each has its own personalities. It may seem a little like someone in your family, but there's only one of you! You are a completely unique and wonderful person. There's a lot more about this on the subject. the uterus (womb)The place where the embryo is found inside the uterus. The baby begins to grow, and other tissues grow in a placenta (e.g. pla-sentid-a). During pregnancy (the time the baby is growing in the mother's womb), the placenta provides oxygen from the air that breathes the muma, and nutrients (new tree items) from the food that it eats. That's why it's important that the mother have good food and worry about not smoking, drinking alcohol or taking drugs, because the developing baby also gets those and he or she can't say, "No." Nutrients of what the mother eats or drinks, and oxygen from the air she breathes, pass through the umbilical cord to the fetus. Any waste of the growing baby passes through the cord to the mother's bloodstream and passes from her body. The umbilical cord is a soft tube 'bendy' from the placenta to the navel (or mummy button) of the fetus. There is a thin skin sack (a bag) full of fluid that protects the skin of the developing baby. The baby can move safely within the mother for 9 months until she is ready to be born in our world. Kim says, "When a girl starts to menstruate (she has her period), that means she is able to conceive (get pregnant). Having a baby means the mother and father have to be ready to take care of their child until that child becomes an adult. It's a big decision that will affect the rest of your lives and that of your baby." In Australia it's against the law to have sex when you're under 17. These laws are to protect young people from situations that are not old enough or experienced to handle. "My sister became pregnant when she was 15 years old. My mother and dad were very upset, but they helped her. He had the baby and now he lives with us. Some people said bad things to my sister and our family. It's still hard for our family, and my sister had to get out of school. He wants to go back to school when his baby is older. My sister told Mom that there was another girl in the hospital who had to let her baby be adopted by another family because she didn't have a mother and dad who would help her. "We have provided this information to help you understand important things about staying healthy and happy. However, if you feel sick or unhappy, it is important to tell your mother or your father, a teacher or another adult. Related topics › › √≥ About stretch marks Addiction - when you can't stop ADHD - How It Can Affect Teens Going to High School Adolescence - What is it? Alcohol - can affect your life - for children The breasts of children - for children who are teenagers Infants - information for girls who are almost teenagers Take care of your skin Chronic fatigue syndrome Dandruff Medicines - information for school children Food disorders - What are they? - information for children Gender (how you behave like a man or a woman) Getting along with your parents Continue with others - relationships and health Getting rid of body hair - for young teenagers Brides and boyfriends Go find out! Go find out! Stay clean! Inhalants - smelling Living through adolescence Parts! Periods - facts and questions Periods - have a period Personal hygiene - caring for your body Pocket money Puberty - child changes, girl changes Puberty - changes in thought The secret boy business - What's wrong with your body? Sexual feelings - information for children Sexual reproduction - how babies are made - for children Smoking and its effects - information for children Body sweating and smell What is puberty? Who says you're overweight? Your hair - a hairy story Zits (acne) Last Updated: Wednesday 28 February 2018 Last Updated: Wednesday 28 February 2018
The Amazing True Story of How Babies are Made': Mums disgusted over kids sex book - Kidspot
Watch The Amazing True Story of How Babies Are Made | Prime Video
Adult Content Warning] Netizens think this children's book about how babies are made is too vulgar | allkpop
The Amazing True Story of How Babies are Made: Parents, watch this.
Help kids learn how babies are made [with Foxy] - YouTube
How A Baby Is Made: How Sex Education Was Taught In The 1970s | BellyBelly
Usborne -How are Babies made? - YouTube
Where do babies come from?' How to answer 10 tough questions kids ask - Mirror Online
Adult Content Warning] Netizens think this children's book about how babies are made is too vulgar | allkpop
How Are Babies Made? (Usborne Flip Flaps): Smith, Alastair: Amazon.com: Books
How Babies are Made | Video | GLOWM
The True Story of How Babies Are Made | True stories, Kids, Baby illustration
The Amazing True Story of How Babies are Made
When your child asks, "How are babies made?" -
Getting pregnant: How babies are made | BabyCenter
Simple guide to explaining to kids how babies are made
The Amazing True Story Of How Babies Are Made - CJZ
The Amazing True Story of How Babies are Made
How the babies are made - YouTube
How do we get a baby | Parents explain how babies are made
The Amazing True Story of How Babies are Made | Fiona Katauskas
The Amazing True Story of How Babies Are Made :HarperCollins Australia
Daddy, how are babies made? by Paintifymyartplz on DeviantArt
Children's book explaining how babies are made goes viral for its bizarre explanation of sexual positions
Mommy, how are babies made?" (a no-freak-out strategy)
When do you tell children how babies are made?
The Amazing True Story of How Babies are Made': Mums disgusted over kids sex book - Kidspot
Mommy, how are Babies made? - Chocolate Covered Katie
How Are Babies Made? | Vermont Public Radio
How Babies Are Made illustrates the baby making process with farm animals and plant life | Daily Mail Online
Kids Tried To Explain How Babies Are Made And It Did Not Go Well
A "how babies are made" book they read to the kids at the preschool I work at. (Translation in the comments) : interestingasfuck
Best kid's books for explaining how babies are made | BOOK REVIEWS
How Babies Are Made | A Cup of Jo
How a Baby Is Made': Vintage book horrifies the internet
The Love Bug: 'How a Baby Is Made', 1971
So, My 5-Year-Old Asked Me How Babies Are Made | Mom.com
How Baby Is Made by Per Holm Knudsen
Mommy, how are babies made?" (a no-freak-out strategy)
Wonderfully Made Babies, A TOB book for ages 9 & up - Home | Facebook
Posting Komentar untuk "how are babies made"