'Rugrats - Incredible Shrinking Babies'
(BBC 1, 3.45 to 3.55pm)
In this episode of the cartoon series about toddlers who find adventure in the adult world around them, Chuckie dreams that he and his young friends have shrunk to the size of dolls.
10 March
'Good Morning Sunday'
(BBC Radio 2, 7 to 9am)
On Mother's Day, GMTV presenter Fiona Phillips talks about how she juggles her roles as mother and celebrity.
'Songs of Praise'
(BBC 1, 5.40 to 6.15pm)
BBC weather forecaster and new mother Helen Young meets a mum who wants more than 35 children and speaks to a mother whose love was tested when her son was sent to prison.
11 March
'Afternoon Play - Baby First'
(BBC Radio 4, 2.15 to 3pm)
This drama-documentary about fatherhood follows the first six months of baby Zoe's life from the perspective of her evolutionary biologist father, who finds he has to read just his theories to take real life into account. 'Baby First' also includes an interview with family therapist David Spellman who explores why fathers get the blues too.
12 March
'Booze'
(BBC 1, 10.35 to 11.15pm)
Twenty-five billion alcoholic drinks are consumed in Britain each year and in this programme presenter Jeremy Bowen conducts an experiment on the effect alcohol has on his brain and body. He also looks at how alcohol is marketed by advertisements linking it with sex, good times and rebellion.
13 March
'The Scent of Him'
(BBC Radio 4, 11.02 to 11.30am)
While the emotional and physical connection of birth mothers to a child put up for adoption is now widely acknowledged, most people would question any such closeness to fathers. Here award-winning reporter Jo Morris talks to four men whose girlfriends became pregnant and asks whether they were able to walk away when the child was born, or if adoption was only the first step in trying to regain contact and build a relationship with their children. The programme's title is taken from a comment made by one father about the day his son was signed over for adoption - 'I can still remember his scent. It is as if it were only yesterday.'
14 March
'Leading Edge'
(BBC Radio 4, 9 to 9.30pm)
This science programme explores what genetics could mean for society in future, and covers subjects such as how the Human Genome Project should be used and other issues raised by the knowledge of the role of different genes in sickness and health.
15 March
'Montel: Paying a Price - Teen Mothers' Struggles'
(Channel 4, 1 to 1.35pm)
American mothers aged from 13 to 19 talk about the struggles and dilemmas they face as the result of having a baby at such a young age.