Rhyme Time Week |Toddler Mini-Project Planner
1-week mini-project planner for Toddlers (18–36 months)
A high-impact week of songs, action rhymes and sound play designed to strengthen early language foundations through rhythm, repetition and movement.
(This pathway component will be available for download by: March 31st 2026)
What this document is
This document is a 1-week Toddler Mini-Project Planner for children aged 18–36 months, focused on Rhyme Time Week.
It provides a structured, playful framework for building Communication & Language (C&L) through rhyme, rhythm, sound discrimination and repetition. The project supports early phonological awareness (hearing rhyme and sound patterns), memory and sequencing, while also strengthening Physical Development (PD) through action rhymes and moving to tempo.
It includes clear practitioner guidance for continuous provision, adult interaction prompts, and flexible focus experiences that can be offered responsively throughout the week.
It is intended to support professional judgement and reflective practice and does not replace statutory EYFS guidance or Development Matters.
Who this document is for
This mini-project planner is particularly useful for:
Toddler room practitioners building daily rhyme, song and story routines
Key persons supporting early communication, confidence and joining-in
EYFS leaders strengthening literacy “seeds” in the toddler phase
Childminders wanting a simple, high-impact week plan with minimal prep
Settings supporting children with emerging speech, EAL, or quieter communication styles
What this document helps you do
This document helps practitioners to:
Build early phonological awareness through rhyme recognition and repetition
Support toddlers to recall and sequence familiar rhymes (memory pathways)
Develop vocabulary for tempo, volume and sound (fast/slow, loud/quiet, beat)
Strengthen gross motor control through action rhymes and tempo changes
Observe schematic play linked to Rotation (spinning) and Trajectory (clapping, arm movement)
Create inclusive participation routes for children who prefer non-verbal joining-in
What’s included in this mini-project planner
This planner provides a complete, practitioner-friendly framework for delivering a 1-week mini-project focused on rhyme, rhythm and movement.
Included in the document:
A clear Project Intent explaining why rhyme and rhythm matter in toddlerhood
EYFS-aligned Intended Learning Focuses, with strong emphasis on C&L and PD
A concise 1-week overview showing the core intentions and child-led experiences
A carefully selected core and extension vocabulary set (e.g., rhyme, beat, repeat, tempo, sequence)
Continuous provision enhancements across three key areas:
Rhythm & Movement Zone (scarves, tempo changes, action songs)
Sound Discrimination Corner (loud/soft, high/low, turn-taking with instruments)
Rhyme Storytelling Station (props, puppets, fill-in-the-blank rhymes)
A flexible weekly detailed plan including:
rhyme recall and rhyming-pair play
musical movement with contrasting tempos
repeating rhythmic patterns (early maths patterning)
sound-and-action games to support group participation
Optional 2–5 minute learning bursts (quick rhyme, movement and sound games)
Inclusion and differentiation guidance (EAL, sensory needs, SEND)
Family engagement ideas to extend rhyme routines at home
An evaluation and reflection section to support responsive next steps
How this fits within the Toddler curriculum framework
Rhyme Time Week is part of our Toddler Mini-Project Planner series (1-week contexts), designed to sit alongside the 12 core toddler projects.
It works especially well:
as a mid-term “boost” for language and listening
when a group needs shared routines that build belonging
to support children with emerging speech through repetition and predictable structure
as a gentle, low-resource week that still produces rich observation and progress-check evidence
This mini-project also links closely to wider toddler pathway guidance on:
language-first practice and interaction
characteristics of effective learning (repetition, engagement, anticipation)
music, movement and regulation as part of communication development
Together, these elements help settings offer toddler curriculum experiences that are joyful, developmentally appropriate, and deeply rooted in how young children learn best.
Additional Project Planners
Main Project Planners (3-4 Weeks)
All About Me & My World
People Who Help Us
Autumn - Senses, Colours & Change
Light, Dark & Celebrations
Winter-Weather, Warmth & Cosy Spaces
Transport & Journeys
Growing & Changing
Animals & Their Homes
Food & Nutrition
Minibeasts & Nature Explorers
Summer - Sand, Sea & Sun
Playful Patterns & Construction
Mini-Project Planners (1 Week)
Big Machines & Building
Cooking & Food Play
Teddy Bears’ Picnic
Colours Everywhere
Water Play Week
My Favourite Things
Rhyme Time Week
Weather Wonders
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.
(This pathway component will be available for download by: March 31st 2026)
Recommended next read Selection
Or read our ‘Little Owls Resources’ Curriculum Intent Statement’
Additional Documents | Professional Membership Contents (Toddler 18-36 Months)
Navigate our Curriculum & Pedagogy guidance documents here.
Pedagogical identity:
Relationship-led, sensory-rich toddler practice grounded in schemas, play, and responsive adult interaction.
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👉 This section prevents over-planning and aligns practice.
Toddler Pedagogy Position Statement – How Toddlers Learn (18–36 Months) [Free Orienting Sample]
Toddler Curriculum Overview & Rationale[Free Orienting Sample]
Curriculum Intent in Toddler Rooms (What It Means — and What It Doesn’t)
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👉 Adult understanding, not child targets.
Progression across 6-month bands (18–24 | 24–30 | 30–36 months)
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👉 Observation is the driver of planning.
Communication & Language
PSED
Physical Development
Maths Seeds
Characteristics of Effective Learning
Behaviour & Emotional Regulation
Schema Observation & Analysis
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👉 The environment does the teaching.
Universal Continuous Provision
Continuous Provision Setup Guides | Toddler Room
Small World
Messy / Wet Play
Dry Sensory & Loose Parts
Construction
Role Play / Home Corner
Mark Making
Book Area / Reading Nook
Music & Sound
Outdoor
Continuous Provision Maps (18–36 Months)
C&L
PSED
PD
Maths Seeds
Literacy Seeds
UW
EAD
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👉 Movement, regulation and sensory experience.
Outdoor Continuous Provision Pack
Outdoor Zone-by-Zone Setup Guide (Gross Motor, Sensory/Nature, Creative/Mark Making, Small World Outside, Water/Mud)
Seasonal Adjustments Planner
Outdoor Risk–Benefit Assessment Template + examples
Nature-Based Learning & Schema Guide
Outdoor Mark Making & Literacy Opportunities Sheet
Outdoor Maths Seeds Sheet
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👉 Projects are optional contexts, not directives.
How Projects Work in Toddler Rooms (Guidance)
Project/Theme Planners:
12 × Main Project Planners (3–4 Weeks)
8 × Mini-Project Planners (1 Week)
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👉 Invitations, provocations and shared experiences.
Supports Child-led learning and responsive provision
Area of Learning Progression Maps & Adult Focus Sessions
(Organised by Age Band: 18–24 months | 24–30 months | 30–36 months)
Supports intentional teaching, vocabulary development and staff confidence
Understanding the World – Experience Progression Pack
Expressive Arts & Design – Creative Media & Expression Toolkit
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👉 Proportionate, meaningful assessment.
Report Template
Practitioner Guidance
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👉 Early identification, gentle support.
SEND Inclusion Strategy Pack (18–36 Months)
Practical SEND & inclusion strategies for toddlers aged 18–36 months
Six quick-reference strategy sheets covering communication, sensory needs, anxiety and behaviour
Aligned with the EYFS Framework and the Assess–Plan–Do–Review approach
Inclusive, diagnosis-free guidance ready to use in everyday practice
Ideal for observations, provision planning, team use and Ofsted evidence
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👉 Strong partnerships, realistic expectations.
Transition
Home–Setting Communication
Parent Information Pages
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)
Alternatively, learn more about and explore our printable provision resources.
Thousands of ready-to-use printables to support provision, organisation, routines and learning across EYFS.
Latest EYFS Articles & Practical Guides | From Our Blog
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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. All resources, experiences and environment arrangements must be risk assessed by the setting and used in accordance with individual children’s developmental stages, needs and supervision requirements.
Safeguarding content does not replace a setting’s safeguarding and child protection policy or the statutory role of the Designated Safeguarding Lead (DSL). All concerns must be managed in line with current statutory guidance and local safeguarding procedures.
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