Communication & Language
Listening, Attention and Understanding |
Birth to three |
Turn towards familiar sounds. Startled by loud noises. Accurately locate the source of a familiar person’s voice, such as their key person or a parent |
Gaze at faces, copying facial expressions and movements like sticking out their tongue. Make eye contact for longer periods. |
Make eye contact for longer periods |
Recognise and are calmed by a familiar and friendly voice. |
Listen and respond to a simple instruction. |
Understand single words in context – ‘cup’, ‘milk’, ‘daddy’. |
Understand frequently used words such as ‘all gone’, ‘no’ and ‘bye bye’. |
Understand simple instructions like “give to mummy” or “stop”. |
Recognise and point to objects if asked about them. |
Generally focus on an activity of their own choice and find it difficult to be directed by an adult. |
Listen to other people’s talk with interest but can easily be distracted by other things. |
Develop pretend play: ‘putting the baby to sleep’ or ‘driving the car to the shops’. |
Listen to simple stories and understand what is happening, with the help of the pictures. |
Identify familiar objects and properties for practitioners when they are described. For Example: ‘Katie’s coat’, ‘blue car’, ‘shiny apple’. |
Understand and act on longer sentences like ‘make teddy jump’ or ‘find your coat’. |
Understand simple questions about ‘who’, ‘what’ and ‘where’ (but generally not ‘why’). |
Speaking |
Birth to three |
Copy what adults do, taking ‘turns’ in conversations (through babbling) and activities. Try to copy adult speech and lip movements. |
Enjoy singing music and toys that make sounds. |
Make sounds to get attention in different ways (for example, crying when hungry or unhappy, making gurgling sounds, laughing, cooing or babbling). |
Babble, using sounds like ‘ba ba’, ‘mamama’ |
Use gestures like waving and pointing to communicate |
Reach or point to something they want while making sounds |
Copy your gestures and words |
Constantly babble and use single words during play |
Use intonation, pitch and changing volume when ‘talking’ |
Can become frustrated when they can’t make themselves understood |
Start to say how they are feeling, using words as well as actions |
Start to develop conversation, often jumping from topic to topic |
Use the speech sounds p, b, m, w. |
Are usually still learning to pronounce: l/r/w/y f/th s/sh/ch/dz/j multisyllabic words such as ‘banana’ and ‘computer’ |
Personal, Social & Emotional Development
Self Regulation |
Birth to three |
Find ways to calm themselves, through being calmed and comforted by their key person. |
Find ways of managing transitions, for example from their parent to their key person. |
Feel strong enough to express a range of emotions. |
Begin to show ‘effortful control’. For example, waiting for a turn and resisting the strong impulse to grab what they want or push their way to the front. |
Be increasingly able to talk about and manage their emotions. |
Safely explore emotions beyond their normal range through play and stories. |
Learn to use the toilet with help, and then independently. |
Managing Self |
Birth to three |
Establish their sense of self. |
Express preferences and decisions. They also try new things and start establishing their autonomy. |
Thrive as they develop self-assurance. |
Look back as they crawl or walk away from their key person. Look for clues about how to respond to something interesting. |
Play with increasing confidence on their own and with other children, because they know their key person is nearby and available. |
Feel confident when taken out around the local neighbourhood, and enjoy exploring new places with their key person. |
Grow in independence, rejecting help (“me do it”). Sometimes this leads to feelings of frustration and tantrums. |
Are talking about their feelings in more elaborated ways: “I’m sad because…” or “I love it when …”. |
Learn to use the toilet with help, and then independently. |
Building Relationships |
Birth to three |
Engage with others through gestures, gaze and talk. |
Use that engagement to achieve a goal. For example, gesture towards their cup to say they want a drink. |
Notice and ask questions about differences, such as skin colour, types of hair, gender, special needs and disabilities, and so on. |
Develop friendships with other children. |
Physical Development
Gross Motor Skills |
Birth to three |
Lift their head while lying on their front. |
Push their chest up with straight arms. |
Roll over: from front to back, then back to front. |
Enjoy moving when outdoors and inside. |
Sit without support |
Begin to crawl in different ways and directions. |
Pull themselves upright and bouncing in preparation for walking |
Gradually gain control of their whole body through. Continual practice of large movements, such as waving, kicking, rolling, crawling and walking |
Clap and stamp to music. |
Fit themselves into spaces, like tunnels, dens and large boxes, and move around in them. |
Enjoy starting to kick, throw and catch balls. |
Begin to walk independently choosing appropriate props to support at first. |
Walk, run, jump and climb – and start to use the stairs independently |
Spin, roll and independently use ropes and swings (for example, tyre swings) |
Sit on a push-along wheeled toy, use a scooter or ride a tricycle. |
Fine Motor Skills |
Birth to three |
Reach out for objects as co-ordination develops. |
Pass things from one hand to the other. Let go of things and hands them to another person, or drops them. |
Build independently with a range of appropriate resources. |
Develop manipulation and control. |
Explore different materials and tools. |
Use large and small motor skills to do things independently, for example manage buttons and zips, and pour drinks. |
Start to eat independently and learning how to use a knife and fork. |
Show an increasing desire to be independent, such as wanting to feed themselves and dress or undress. |
Literacy
Comprehension |
Birth to three |
Enjoy songs and rhymes, tuning in and paying attention. |
Join in with songs and rhymes, copying sounds, rhythms, tunes and tempo. |
Say some of the words in songs and rhymes. |
Copy finger movements and other gestures. |
Sing songs and say rhymes independently, for example, singing whilst playing. |
Enjoy sharing books with an adult. |
Pay attention and responds to the pictures or the words. |
Have favourite books and seeks them out, to share with an adult, with another child, or to look at alone. |
Repeat words and phrases from familiar stories. |
Ask questions about the book. Makes comments and shares their own ideas |
Develop play around favourite stories using props. |
Word Reading |
Birth to three |
Notice some print, such as the first letter of their name, a bus or door number, or a familiar logo. |
Writing |
Birth to three |
Enjoy drawing freely. |
Add some marks to their drawings, which they give meaning to. For example: “That says mummy.” |
Make marks on their picture to stand for their name. |
Mathematics
Number |
Birth to three |
Take part in finger rhymes with numbers. |
Counting-like behaviour, such as making sounds, pointing or saying some numbers in sequence. |
Count in everyday contexts, sometimes skipping numbers - ‘1-2-3-5.’ |
Numerical Patterns |
Birth to three |
Combine objects like stacking blocks and cups. Put objects inside others and take them out again. |
React to changes of amount in a group of up to three items. |
Compare amounts, saying ‘lots’, ‘more’ or ‘same’. |
Climb and squeezing selves into different types of spaces. |
Build with a range of resources. |
Complete inset puzzles. |
Compare sizes, weights etc. using gesture and language - ‘bigger/ little/smaller’, ‘high/low’, ‘tall’, ‘heavy’. |
Notice patterns and arrange things in patterns. |
Understanding the World
People, Culture & Communities |
Birth to three |
Make connections between the features of their family and other families. |
Notice differences between people. |
The Natural World |
Birth to three |
Repeat actions that have an effect. |
Explore materials with different properties. |
Explore natural materials, indoors and outside. |
Explore and respond to different natural phenomena in their setting and on trips. |
Expressive Art & Design
Creating with Materials |
Birth to three |
Notice patterns with strong contrasts and be attracted by patterns resembling the human face. |
Start to make marks intentionally. |
Explore paint, using fingers and other parts of their bodies as well as brushes and other tools. |
Express ideas and feelings through making marks, and sometimes give a meaning to the marks they make. |
Start to develop pretend play, pretending that one object represents another. For example, a child holds a wooden block to her ear and pretends it’s a phone. |
Explore different materials, using all their senses to investigate them. Manipulate and play with different materials. |
Use their imagination as they consider what they can do with different materials. |
Make simple models which express their ideas. |
Being Imaginative and Expressive |
Birth to three |
Show attention to sounds and music. |
Respond emotionally and physically to music when it changes. |
Move and dance to music. |
Anticipate phrases and actions in rhymes and songs, like ‘Peepo’. |
Explore their voices and enjoy making sounds. |
Join in with songs and rhymes, making some sounds. |
Make rhythmical and repetitive sounds. |
Explore a range of sound-makers and instruments and play them in different ways. |
Enjoy and take part in action songs, such as ‘Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star’. |