Planning as a childminder looks very different from planning in group settings.
Working with mixed ages and small numbers in home-based environments means planning must be flexible, responsive and rooted in real-life experiences.
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Planning as a childminder looks very different from planning in group settings.
Working with mixed ages and small numbers in home-based environments means planning must be flexible, responsive and rooted in real-life experiences.
Read morePlanning in a baby room looks very different from planning for older children.
For babies aged 0–18 months, learning is not driven by activities, topics or outcomes. Instead, it is rooted in relationships, care routines and responsive interaction.
This page explains what planning means in baby room practice, how it aligns with the EYFS, and how practitioners can plan confidently without over-formalising provision.
Read morePlanning for toddlers is often where practice begins to drift into activities, themes and outcomes.
But in high-quality EYFS provision, planning for children aged 18–36 months remains play-led, observation-led and rooted in relationships.
Toddlers are active, curious and increasingly independent — but they still learn through exploration, repetition, movement & interaction with adults.
Planning does not direct this learning. It supports adults to respond to it.
Read morePlanning in Reception is where the EYFS curriculum becomes most clearly defined — but it should never become formal, rigid or “Year 1-like.”
Children aged 4–5 are ready for more structured learning, increasingly independent, developing stronger language and thinking skills and beginning to apply what they know.
Planning reflects this by balancing systematic teaching with meaningful play and application.
Read morePlanning in preschool marks an important shift in EYFS practice.
Children aged 3–4 are more socially aware, increasingly verbal, able to sustain attention for longer and ready to begin developing early skills.
But this does not mean moving to formal teaching or rigid plans.
Instead, planning in preschool is about balancing child-led play with purposeful adult guidance.
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