Fairly likely you will come across a choking situation or someone needing CPR.
they learn to fight when they play fight
an apprentice
By seeing their mother hunt and learn from trying the experiences the mother is trying to teach!
No, since they are not born with the understanding that there are other people. However, people are born with the capacity to learn interpersonal skills, which they must do when they are quite young. Children who grew to their teens without having other people around them cannot be taught interpersonal skills, because they are too old. Some conditions, like autism, can seriously impair a person's ability to learn such skills, and obviously, some people learn them better and more thoroughly than others.
squires
Every organism grows. Cells multiply. For animals, this means they learn their specific animal skills. For humans, it means we learn specific human skills. When we know many skills like our adult parents know, we are said to be grown up. However, just like teenage and young adult animals, young adult humans continue to learn and learn from mistakes even though we are supposed to be "grown up".
C. playing just took the test
Until they are 6 years old to learn the necessary skills for survival.
Yes, Santa was young once, and had to learn a lot and grow up and decide what he wanted to do with his life.
Thomas Edison learned to talk at a young age during his childhood. Like most children, he likely began developing his speech and language skills around the age of 1 or 2.
They were expected to learn the basics in life. for example, cooking, cleaning, taking care of the family, ect. they started learning these techniques around the age of 13 and where expected to start doing them around the house on a daily basis by the age of 13 & a half.
Certainly. Before there was such a thing as Vocational-Technical Schools this is the primary ways that tradesmen learned their craft. A young man would sign on with a craftsman and work like a slave for this person for little more than room and board in order to learn the skills of the craft from their master. This was the only way to learn there crafts and to pass on the skills from one generation to another. The apprentice was usually a very poor person who had no other way to proceed in life other than to learn in this manner. They had no formal education system early on and even after some were taught basics they still needed the hands on education of the artisan masters.