Communication & Language
Listening, Attention and Understanding |
3 & 4 year olds |
Enjoy listening to longer stories and can remember much of what happens. |
Can find it difficult to pay attention to more than one thing at a time. |
Use a wider range of vocabulary. |
Understand a question or instruction that has two parts, such as “Get your coat and wait at the door”. |
Understand ‘why’ questions, like: “Why do you think the caterpillar got so fat?” |
Speaking |
3 & 4 year olds |
Sing a large repertoire of songs |
Know many rhymes, be able to talk about familiar books, and be able to tell a long story. |
Develop their communication, but may continue to have problems with irregular tenses and plurals, such as ‘runned’ for ‘ran’, ‘swimmed’ for ‘swam’. |
May have problems saying: - some sounds: r, j, th, ch, and sh – multisyllabic words such as ‘pterodactyl’, ‘planetarium’ or ‘hippopotamus’ |
Use longer sentences of four to six words. |
Be able to express a point of view and to debate when they disagree with an adult or a friend, using words as well as actions. |
Can start a conversation with an adult or a friend and continue it for many turns. |
Use talk to organise themselves and their play: “Let’s go on a bus... you sit there... I’ll be the driver.” |
Personal, Social & Emotional Development
Self Regulation |
3 & 4 year olds |
Develop their sense of responsibility and membership of a community. |
Increasingly follow rules, understanding why they are important. |
Do not always need an adult to remind them of a rule. |
Be increasingly independent in meeting their own care needs, e.g. brushing teeth, using the toilet, washing and drying their hands thoroughly. |
Managing Self |
3 & 4 year olds |
Select and use activities and resources, with help when needed. This helps them to achieve a goal they have chosen, or one which is suggested to them. |
Talk about their feelings using words like ‘happy’, ‘sad’, ‘angry’ or ‘worried’. |
Building Relationships |
3 & 4 year olds |
Become more outgoing with unfamiliar people, in the safe context of their setting |
Show more confidence in new social situations. |
Play with one or more other children, extending and elaborating play ideas. |
Help to find solutions to conflicts and rivalries. For example, accepting that not everyone can be Spider-Man in the game, and suggesting other ideas |
Develop appropriate ways of being assertive. |
Talk with others to solve conflicts. |
Begin to understand how others might be feeling. |
Physical Development
Gross Motor Skills |
3 & 4 year olds |
Continue to develop their movement, balancing, riding (scooters, trikes and bikes) and ball skills. |
Go up steps and stairs, or climb up apparatus, using alternate feet. |
Skip, hop, stand on one leg and hold a pose for a game like musical statues. |
Use large-muscle movements to wave flags and streamers, paint and make marks. |
Start taking part in some group activities which they make up for themselves, or in teams. |
Are increasingly able to use and remember sequences and patterns of movements which are related to music and rhythm. |
Match their developing physical skills to tasks and activities in the setting. For example, they decide whether to crawl, walk or run across a plank, depending on its length and width. |
Choose the right resources to carry out their own plan. For example, choosing a spade to enlarge a small hole they dug with a trowel. |
Collaborate with others to manage large items, such as moving a long plank safely, carrying large hollow blocks. |
Fine Motor Skills |
3 & 4 year olds |
Use one-handed tools and equipment, for example, making snips in paper with scissors. |
Use a comfortable grip with good control when holding pens and pencils. |
Show a preference for a dominant hand. |
Be increasingly independent as they get dressed and undressed, for example, putting coats on and doing up zips. |
Make healthy choices about food, drink, activity and toothbrushing. |
Literacy
Comprehension |
3 & 4 year olds |
Engage in extended conversations about stories, learning new vocabulary. |
Word Reading |
3 & 4 year olds |
Understand the five key concepts about print: - print has meaning - print can have different purposes - we read English text from left to right and from top to bottom - the names of the different parts of a book - page sequencing. |
Develop their phonological awareness, so that they can: - spot and suggest rhymes - count or clap syllables in a word – recognise words with the same initial sound, such as money and mother. |
Writing |
3 & 4 year olds |
Use some of their print and letter knowledge in their early writing. For example: writing a pretend shopping list that starts at the top of the page; write ‘m’ for mummy. |
Write some or all of their name. |
Write some letters accurately. |
Mathematics
Number |
3 & 4 year olds |
Fast recognition of up to 3 objects, without having to count them individually (‘subitising’). |
Recite numbers past 5. |
Say one number for each item in order: 1,2,3,4,5 |
Know that the last number reached when counting a small set of objects tells you how many there are in total (‘cardinal principle’). |
Show ‘finger numbers’ up to 5. |
Link numerals and amounts: for example, showing the right number of objects to match the numeral, up to 5. |
Experiment with their own symbols and marks as well as numerals. |
Solve real world mathematical problems with numbers up to 5. |
Numerical Patterns |
3 & 4 year olds |
Compare quantities using language: ‘more than’, ‘fewer than’. |
Talk about and explore 2D and 3D shapes (for example, circles, rectangles, triangles and cuboids) using informal and mathematical language: ‘sides’, ‘corners’; ‘straight’, ‘flat’, ‘round’. |
Understand position through words alone – for example, “The bag is under the table,” – with no pointing. |
Describe a familiar route. |
Discuss routes and locations, using words like ‘in front of’ and ‘behind’ |
Make comparisons between objects relating to size, length, weight and capacity. |
Select shapes appropriately: flat surfaces for building, a triangular prism for a roof etc. |
Combine shapes to make new ones – an arch, a bigger triangle etc. |
Talk about and identifies the patterns around them. For example: stripes on clothes, designs on rugs and wallpaper. Use informal language like ‘pointy’, ‘spotty’, ‘blobs’ etc. |
Extend and create ABAB patterns – stick, leaf, stick, leaf. |
Notice and correct an error in a repeating pattern. |
Begin to describe a sequence of events, real or fictional, using words such as ‘first’, ‘then...’ |
Understanding the World
Past & Present |
3 & 4 year olds |
Begin to make sense of their own life-story and family’s history. |
Show interest in different occupations. |
People, Culture & Communities |
3 & 4 year olds |
Continue to develop positive attitudes about the differences between people. |
Know that there are different countries in the world and talk about the differences they have experienced or seen in photos. |
The Natural World |
3 & 4 year olds |
Use all their senses in hands-on exploration of natural materials. |
Explore collections of materials with similar and/or different properties. |
Talk about what they see, using a wide vocabulary. |
Explore how things work. |
Plant seeds and care for growing plants. |
Understand the key features of the life cycle of a plant and an animal. |
Begin to understand the need to respect and care for the natural environment and all living things. |
Explore and talk about different forces they can feel. |
Talk about the differences between materials and changes they notice. |
Expressive Art & Design
Creating with Materials |
3 & 4 year olds |
Take part in simple pretend play, using an object to represent something else even though they are not similar. |
Begin to develop complex stories using small world equipment like animal sets, dolls and dolls houses etc. |
Make imaginative and complex ‘small worlds’ with blocks and construction kits, such as a city with different buildings |
Explore different materials freely, in order to develop their ideas about how to use them and what to make. |
Develop their own ideas and then decide which materials to use to express them. |
Join different materials and explore different textures. |
Create closed shapes with continuous lines, and begin to use these shapes to represent objects. |
Draw with increasing complexity and detail, such as representing a face with a circle and including details. |
Use drawing to represent ideas like movement or loud noises. |
Explore colour and colour-mixing. |
Show different emotions in their drawings – happiness, sadness, fear etc. |
Being Imaginative and Expressive |
3 & 4 year olds |
Listen with increased attention to sounds. |
Respond to what they have heard, expressing their thoughts and feelings. |
Remember and sing entire songs. |
Sing the pitch of a tone sung by another person (‘pitch match’). |
Sing the melodic shape (moving melody, such as up and down, down and up) of familiar songs. |
Create their own songs, or improvise a song around one they know. |
Play instruments with increasing control to express their feelings and ideas. |