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Play is not a break from learning in early childhood; play is the learning. Play-based learning in early childhood is the most well-researched, widely endorsed approach to early education, and it is the foundation of Australia’s Early Years Learning Framework (EYLF). Children who learn through play develop stronger cognitive, language, physical, and social-emotional skills than those in formal, structured instruction, and they do it in a way that is intrinsically motivating, developmentally appropriate, and deeply joyful.

What Is Play-Based Learning?

Play-based learning is a pedagogical approach in which children explore, discover, and make sense of the world through play. It is child-centred, meaning a child’s interests, questions, and natural curiosity drive the experience, not a rigid curriculum or adult agenda.

It exists on a spectrum:

  • Free (unstructured) play — entirely child-led, no adult agenda. Children choose what, how, and how long.
  • Guided play — educators introduce a provocation or challenge, then step back and re-enter to extend thinking.
  • Structured play — adult-initiated activities with intentional learning goals embedded, such as a sensory bin set up to explore measurement.

Quality early childhood programmes blend all three, creating environments where children feel safe to take risks, make mistakes, and revisit ideas.

Why Early Childhood Is the Critical Window for Learning Through Play

The years from birth to age eight represent the most significant period of brain development in a person’s life. During this window, the brain forms neural connections faster than at any other time, connections that underpin thinking, language, movement, and social behaviour.

Play is the mechanism through which young children build those connections:

  • A toddler stacking blocks practises spatial reasoning and cause and effect.
  • A child pretending a cardboard box is a spaceship exercises symbolic thinking, a precursor to reading and mathematics.
  • Two children negotiating the rules of a game practise language, theory of mind, and self-regulation simultaneously.

What the research says:

  • Jean Piaget showed that children construct understanding by physically interacting with their world; play is how they do it.
  • Lev Vygotsky found that children consistently operate at a higher cognitive level during play than in formal instruction; he called this the “zone of proximal development”.
  • Educators drawing on Montessori, Reggio Emilia, and Froebel traditions have built entire curricula around the principle that children learn best through hands-on, play-rich environments.

Play builds neural pathways that underpin lifelong learning

The Benefits of Play-Based Learning

Play-based learning supports development across every domain. Here is how it works across the five key areas:

Cognitive Development

Play-based learning supports cognitive development by giving children repeated, hands-on opportunities to explore cause and effect, pattern, quantity, and sequence all in a low-stakes, self-motivated context. Children form schemas (mental frameworks), test hypotheses, and develop executive function skills, including attention, working memory, and cognitive flexibility.

 Language and Communication

Play is a language-rich environment. Children narrate their play, negotiate with peers, ask questions, and listen all in meaningful contexts. Dramatic play exposes children to a wide vocabulary range, and storytelling builds early literacy skills.

Research shows children develop stronger early literacy skills when language is embedded in meaningful experience, not drilled in isolation.

 Fine Motor Skills

Activities central to play, drawing, painting, threading beads, using scissors, manipulating playdough, and building with small blocks develop the hand-eye coordination, grip strength, and precise muscle control children need for writing.

Play-based learning develops these skills naturally and enjoyably, building the physical foundations for independence in school and daily life.

 Gross Motor Skills

Active outdoor play, climbing, digging, dancing, and balancing strengthen large muscle groups that underpin physical health, coordination, and body awareness. Sensory play exploring water, mud, and textured materials further develops gross motor skills alongside sensory processing.

Social and Emotional Development

When children play together, they practise empathy, perspective-taking, self-regulation, cooperation, and conflict resolution – the skills most predictive of long-term success in school and life.

Imaginative play is particularly powerful: when a child plays the role of a doctor, teacher, or shopkeeper, they are practising what it feels like to be someone else, building the theory of mind that underlies all meaningful relationships.

Types of Play That Support Learning

Three types of play-based learning sensory, imaginative, and active outdoor play

Imaginative and Pretend Play

Imaginative play, also called dramatic or symbolic play, is one of the richest learning contexts available to young children. When children take on roles, create scenarios, and use objects to represent other things, they develop creativity, narrative thinking, vocabulary, and problem-solving.

A simple dress-up box and a few props generate hours of complex play spanning multiple developmental domains simultaneously.

 Sensory Play

Sensory play involves exploring materials through sight, touch, smell, sound, and sometimes taste. Water, sand, playdough, mud, slime, and sensory bins. It supports:

  • Scientific investigation and hypothesis-testing
  • Gross motor development
  • Language development (children love describing what they feel and see)
  • Emotional regulation: many children find sensory play calming and focusing.g

Structured vs Unstructured Play

Both have a place in quality early childhood education.

Structured Play Unstructured Play
Who leads Educator-initiated Child-led
Goal Intentional learning objective embedded Child-determined
Value Scaffolds specific skills and concepts Builds agency, intrinsic motivation, creativity
Example Sensory bin set up to explore measurement Free building with blocks

 

The best play-based programmes move fluidly between both reading children’s cues and extending learning without taking over the experience.

 Play-Based Learning and the EYLF

Australia’s Early Years Learning Framework (EYLF) Belonging, Being and Becoming explicitly recognises play-based learning as the most effective pedagogy for children from birth to five years. It underpins the National Quality Framework (NQF) that governs all approved early childhood education and care services in Australia.

The EYLF states that play “provides opportunities for children to learn as they discover, create, improvise and imagine”. It supports all five EYLF learning outcomes:

  1. Children have a strong sense of identity
  2. Children are connected with and contribute to their world
  3. Children have a strong sense of well-being
  4. Children are confident and involved learners
  5. Children are effective communicators

At Happy Sprouts, our play-based approach is built directly on the EYLF, not as a compliance exercise, but as a lived philosophy embedded in how we design our environments, plan our programmes, and support each child’s learning journey.

Play-Based Learning vs Traditional Learning

Play-based learning is not the absence of structure; it is a different kind of structure. Here is how it compares to traditional, teacher-directed learning:

Play-Based Learning Traditional Learning
Led by Child’s interests and curiosity Teacher/curriculum
Style Experiential, hands-on Passive, abstract
Motivation Intrinsic External (grades, praise)
Scope Holistic — multiple domains at once Subject-segmented
Flexibility Responsive to the child Fixed
Best for Birth to age 8 Later formal schooling

 

Young children are not neurologically ready for passive, formal instruction. Play-based learning aligns with how their brains are actually wired to learn, which is why the EYLF recommends it so strongly.

Play-Based Learning at Happy Sprouts

At Happy Sprouts, play-based learning is embedded in every aspect of our programme and environment.

Our educators are trained to observe children’s play with purpose, identifying learning opportunities and extending them through careful questioning, new materials, or thoughtfully designed provocations. Our indoor and outdoor environments invite exploration, encourage risk-taking, and support development across all domains.

Whether it is a mud kitchen in the garden, a construction corner stocked with loose parts, a dramatic play space, or a quiet reading nook, every element of the Happy Sprouts environment has been chosen to support children’s growth through play.

Our programme is fully aligned with the EYLF and NQF, and our educators undergo continuous professional development to ensure our approach reflects the best available research and practice.

Find out more about our play-based approach or enquire about enrolment today.

H2- How Parents Can Support Play-Based Learning at Home

Play-based learning does not stop at the centre gate. Here are practical ways to extend it at home:

  1. Choose open-ended toys — blocks, playdough, art supplies, loose parts (shells, pebbles, and fabric scraps), and dress-up items invite unlimited play.
  2. Create a yes space — a designated area where children are free to make mess, explore, and create without constant correction.
  3. Follow the child’s lead — resist directing play. Ask open questions: “I wonder what would happen if…” or “What are you making?”
  4. Get outside daily — nature play (garden exploring, puddle-splashing, leaf-collecting) is rich with sensory and cognitive learning.
  5. Read together — shared reading is one of the most powerful ways to build language development. Let children lead the discussion.
  6. Limit screen time — unstructured, screen-free play builds imagination, attention, and self-regulation in ways passive media cannot.

Ready to see play-based learning in action? Book a tour of Happy Sprouts or enquire about enrolment today.

Frequently Asked Questions About Play-Based Learning

What is play-based learning in early childhood?

Play-based learning in early childhood is a pedagogical approach in which children learn through play, exploring, creating, imagining, and problem-solving in child-centred environments. It is the approach recommended by Australia’s Early Years Learning Framework (EYLF) for children from birth to age five, and it is the foundation of the Happy Sprouts programme.

Why is play-based learning important for child development?

Play is the primary vehicle for learning in early childhood. It builds cognitive, language, fine motor, gross motor, and social-emotional development simultaneously, and it does so in a way that is intrinsically motivating and developmentally aligned with how young children’s brains are wired to grow.

What are the benefits of play-based learning?

Play-based learning develops problem-solving and critical thinking, builds language and early literacy, strengthens fine and gross motor skills, fosters empathy and social skills, and supports school readiness all while keeping children engaged and motivated through natural curiosity.

How does play-based learning support cognitive development?

Play gives children hands-on opportunities to form mental frameworks (schemas), test hypotheses, and explore concepts like pattern, quantity, and cause and effect. It also builds executive function, attention, working memory, and cognitive flexibility that underpins academic learning in later years.

What is the difference between structured and unstructured play?

Unstructured play is entirely child-led with no adult agenda. Structured play involves educator-initiated activities with intentional learning goals embedded. Both have value; quality early childhood programmes like Happy Sprouts use a blend of both alongside guided play, where educators introduce a provocation and then step back to observe and extend.

How does play help children develop social skills?

Through play, children practise negotiation, cooperation, turn-taking, empathy, and conflict resolution. Imaginative play in particular builds theory of mind, the ability to understand that others have different thoughts and feelings, which is foundational to all social relationships.

What does the EYLF say about play-based learning?

The EYLF (Early Years Learning Framework) recognises play-based learning as the most effective pedagogy for children from birth to five. It states that play “provides opportunities for children to learn as they discover, create, improvise and imagine”, and it underpins all five EYLF learning outcomes. Learn how Happy Sprouts implements the EYLF.

How can parents support play-based learning at home?

Choose open-ended toys, create a safe play space, follow your child’s lead rather than directing play, get outside daily for nature play, and read together regularly. Ask open-ended questions to extend your child’s thinking without taking over the experience.

What are examples of play-based learning activities?

Examples of play-based learning activities include building with blocks, playdough and clay work, water and sand play, dramatic and pretend play, nature walks and outdoor exploration, art and craft, music and movement, puzzles and construction, cooking and baking, and collaborative group projects. At Happy Sprouts, these experiences are designed intentionally to align with each child’s developmental stage.

 

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