Children from Henley Montessori School and St Paul's Nursery in Balsall Heath, showed the royal visitor their workshop, before popping into the laundrette, a shop, a cafe and a mini-museum.
There was a minor calamity in the cafe when the door of a cupboard underneath a sink came off its hinges, prompting laughter. There is indication that only a small portion of the brain varies with variation in the body dimensions. Kate, 38, said: 'What we experience between the ages of nought and five shapes the developing brain. One of its members, David Holmes CBE, chief executive of Family Action, of which the Duchess is patron, said: 'Every parent, carer and family wants the best for their child and raising the profile of the vital early years in a child's life is work of national importance.
Share 8.2k shares Speaking at MiniBrum, an interactive, child-sized mini-city at Thinktank, Birmingham's science museum, the duchess said: 'I'm here today to launch a survey to hear society's views about raising the next generation. The Duchess of Cambridge is spending 24 hours touring the country to publicise the initiative and said today: 'As a parent, I know how much we cherish the future health and happiness of our children.
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