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  2. Weight and height percentile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weight_and_Height_Percentile

    By doing this, doctors can track a child's growth over time and monitor how a child is growing in relation to other children. There are different charts for boys and girls because their growth rates and patterns differ. For both boys and girls there are two sets of charts: one for infants ages 0 to 36 months and another for ages 2 and above.

  3. Growth chart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Growth_chart

    Growth curve of a girl, compared to the 2006 WHO curves Growth charts are different for boys and girls, due in part to pubertal differences and disparity in final adult height. In addition, children born prematurely and children with chromosomal abnormalities such as Down syndrome and Turner syndrome follow distinct growth curves which deviate ...

  4. Percentile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percentile

    In statistics, a k-th percentile, also known as percentile score or centile, is a score below which a given percentage k of scores in its frequency distribution falls ("exclusive" definition) or a score at or below which a given percentage falls ("inclusive" definition); i.e. a score in the k-th percentile would be above approximately k% of all scores in its set.

  5. Classification of childhood weight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classification_of...

    The 2000 CDC growth charts - a revised version of the 1977 NCHS growth charts - are the current standard tool for health care providers and offer 16 charts (8 for boys and 8 for girls), of which BMI-for-age is commonly used for aiding in the diagnoses of childhood obesity. [1]

  6. Age and female fertility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_and_female_fertility

    The average age of a girl's first period is 12 to 13 (12.5 years in the United States, [6] 12.72 in Canada, [7] 12.9 in the UK [8]) but, in postmenarchal girls, about 80% of the cycles are anovulatory in the first year after menarche, which declines to 50% in the third year, and to 10% by the sixth. [9]

  7. Percentile rank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percentile_rank

    Percentile ranks (PRs or percentiles) compared to Normal curve equivalents (NCEs). In educational measurement, a range of percentile ranks, often appearing on a score report, shows the range within which the test taker's "true" percentile rank probably occurs.

  8. Menarche - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menarche

    The girls who experience menarche wear special clothes and style their hair like the Navajo goddess "Changing Woman". [44] The Nuu-chah-nulth (also known as the Nootka) believe that physical endurance is the most important quality in young women. At menarche the girl is taken out to sea and left there to swim back. [44]

  9. Child development stages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_development_stages

    Young toddlers (12 months) have a wider midfoot than older toddlers (24 months). The foot will develop greater contact area during walking. Maximum force of the foot will increase. Peak pressure of the foot increases. Force-time integral increases in all except the midfoot. The lateral toes did not show a pattern in development of walking.