Daily Routines as Learning Opportunities
Understanding care routines as the foundation of learning for babies aged 0–18 months
(Available Now with Professional Membership)
What this document is
This document explains how daily routines in baby rooms function as rich, meaningful learning opportunities for babies aged 0–18 months. It sets out why care routines are not interruptions to learning, but the primary context in which learning, development and wellbeing occur.
The guidance supports practitioners to recognise learning within everyday moments such as feeding, nappy changing, settling and transitions, and to understand how adult presence, pace and responsiveness shape babies’ experiences. It helps settings articulate routine-based practice clearly and confidently in line with the EYFS.
This document supports professional judgement and does not replace statutory EYFS guidance.
Who this is for
Baby room practitioners working with babies aged 0–18 months
EYFS leaders, managers and room leaders
Childminders caring for babies
Settings reflecting on routines, care and emotional wellbeing
Practitioners preparing to explain practice to parents or inspectors
What this document helps you do
Understand routines as the structure for baby learning
Recognise learning across communication, PSED and physical development
Slow down routines to support connection and regulation
Strengthen adult–baby interactions during care moments
Use routine-based observation to inform responsive practice
Support emotional regulation through predictability and consistency
Protect routine-based learning from task-driven approaches
How this fits within our Baby (0–18 months) framework
This document forms part of our Routines, Care & Emotional Wellbeing strand within the wider Baby Curriculum & Pedagogy framework.
Related documents include:
How Our Baby Room Practice Works
Understanding Early Communication & Regulation
Supporting Emotional Regulation in Baby Rooms
Observation-Led Practice & Responsive Care documents
Curriculum Language in Baby Rooms (Intent, Implementation & Impact Explained)
Together, these documents support a coherent approach to baby room practice where care, relationships and responsiveness are understood as the heart of the curriculum.
This document is part of our EYFS Curriculum & Pedagogy Membership (Professional), which provides full access to age-specific curriculum frameworks, planning guidance, assessment tools and leadership support.
(Available Now with Professional Membership)
Related documents include:
Or read our ‘Little Owls Resources’ Curriculum Intent Statement’
Additional Documents | Professional Membership Contents (Babies 0-18 months)
Navigate our Curriculum & Pedagogy guidance documents here.
Pedagogical identity:
Relationship-led, care-centred baby practice where routines, interaction and sensory experience are the curriculum.
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👉 This section protects developmentally appropriate practice.
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👉 These documents support adult understanding — not expectations for babies.
Baby Curriculum Maps - Developmental progression across age bands (0–3 months | 3–6 months | 6-9 months | 9-12 months | 12-18 months)
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👉 Observation informs interaction, routines and environment.
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👉 The environment supports exploration, movement and communication.
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👉 Care routines are central to learning and wellbeing.
Transition & Sleep Routine Record Pack
Daily Transition Record
Individual Sleep Routine Profile
Review Template
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👉 Language is built through interaction, not instruction.
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👉 Planning supports adults — it never directs babies.
‘Intent - Implementation - Impact’ Reference Grids (Emotional, Communication, Physical, Sensory, Social, Problem-Solving, Independence)
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👉 Proportionate, sensitive and statutory practice.
Progress Check at Age 2 (looking ahead)
Report Template
Practitioner Guidance
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👉 Early support is relational, preventative and respectful.
SEND Identification & Next Steps Pack | Babies
What to Look For
What Evidence to Collect
Practical Next Steps
A practical Toolkit for Early Years Practitioners
Inclusion Through Environment & Interaction
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👉 Strong partnerships support consistency and trust.
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👉 Transitions are emotional, not academic.
Additional Whole-Setting Guidance | for Professional Members
Explore our whole-setting guidance below, including overarching curriculum and pedagogy documents, early years schemas and EYFS setting policies.
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Early Years Schemas - Practitioner Toolkit | EYFS Birth-5
↪ Schema Cards (definition, behaviours, age-related examples, enabling resources)
↪ Schema Observation & Responsive Provision Planning Template
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EYFS Group Setting Policies Pack
↪ x 22 Policy Documents
↪ Policy Sign-Off and Confirmation Document
↪ EYFS Setting Policy Folder Contents List
Childminder Setting Policies Pack
↪ x 22 Policy Documents
↪ Childminder Assistant or Volunteer Policy Sign-Off and Confirmation Document
↪ Childminder Policy Folder Contents List
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↪ Clear, practitioner-friendly explanations of key curriculum and pedagogy terms used throughout our guidance.
Looking for a different age group pathway?
Select the pathway that best reflects your role or the age group you work with. You do not need to use everything. (Some practitioners may use more than one pathway.)
What is Professional Membership?
Find our more about our Professional guidance for confident, reflective EYFS practice (Birth–5)
Latest EYFS Articles & Practical Guides | From Our Blog
Stay informed, get expert advice, and find inspiration from our collection of articles and useful external resources, tailored specifically for EYFS practitioners. We regularly publish in-depth articles to support you with current best practices, regulatory changes, and fresh ideas.
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Content within the EYFS Curriculum & Pedagogy Membership is provided as professional guidance and support. It reflects current understanding of the EYFS statutory framework, Development Matters and inspection expectations at the time of writing. Practitioners are responsible for applying professional judgement and ensuring practice aligns with current statutory requirements and their specific context.
Updated: January 2026
