Belonging, Being and Becoming: The Early Years Learning Framework for Australia (2009)

This is a new national early learning framework for children from birth to five years.

The Federal Government has developed the Early Years Learning Framework to ensure your child receives quality education programs in early childhood settings.  This is a vital time for them to learn and develop.

The framework’s vision is for all children to experience play-based learning that is engaged and builds success for life.

It is a guide for early childhood educators who work with children from birth to five years.  They will use the framework in partnership with families, children’s first and most influential educators, to develop learning programs responsive to children’s ideas, interests, strengths and abilities and recognize that children learn through their play.

The Early Years Learning Framework describes childhood as a time of belonging, being and becoming.

Belonging

BELONGING is the basis for living a fulfilling life.  Children feel they belong because of the relationships they have with their family, community, culture and place.

At Currumbin Pines Early Learning we see belonging:

As an INDIVIDUAL

  • Knowing where and with whom we belong.
  • To feel a part of the community I’m in whether it be at home, centre or neighbourhood.  Feel comfortable and at ease.
  • Knowing who you are as a person.  What groups you belong to and your place in society.
  • Being made welcome in a group.

As an EDUCATOR

  • Being part of the childcare service and being a support system to families.
  • To feel part of my workplace, centre, room.  Feel comfortable to be myself and to feel valued a part of a small community.
  • Feeling like we belong to a room or group of children and sharing a special bond with our children – watching them grow.
  • Feeling part of a professional group of like minded people.

Through the eye of an Infant (0-2 years)

  • Feeling loved and supported.
  • To feel secure, comfortable, looked after.  To have a strong sense of wellbeing.
  • Feeling close/connected to their carers and safe in their care.
  • Feeling safe and secure with those people who look after them.

Through the eyes of a Toddler (2-3 years)

  • Feeling like a part of something and having it shown e.g. artwork displayed.
  • To feel supported emotionally, welcomed by educators, to feel a part of their environment.
  • Developing friendships with other toddlers – participating in room activities and learning together.
  • Being made to feel part of a group and safe with their educators.

Through the eyes of a Pre schooler (3-5 years)

  • Discovering friendships.
  • To feel welcomed, wanted, a valued part of the preschool room.  To feel supported emotionally.
  • Feeling part of their group – sharing stories during show and tell, having art on the walls and feeling like they are involved.
  • Having close friends that they feel connected to.

Through the eyes of Afterschool Care (5-12 years)

  • Maintaining meaningful friendships.
  • To feel welcomed, wanted, a valued part of the Afterschool care environment.  To be respected by their peers and educators.
  • Being made to feel valued in a group.
  • Being involved in activities, sharing stories with their peers, participating in concerts, having their art on the wall, feeling like they belong and feeling comfortable.

Through the eyes of a Family

  • Feeling that the family unit is more important than anything else.
  • Being part of a group that is based on love.
  • Being involved with their centre, coming along to centre functions, Christmas parties/concerts.

Being

BEING is about living here and now.  Childhood is a special time in life and children need time to just “be” – time to play, try new things and have fun.

At Currumbin Pines Early Learning we see being:

As an INDIVIDUAL

  • Doing as I want.
  • Knowing who I am.
  • Being part of your surroundings and environment.
  • Feeling happy with where I am as an individual with my life.

As an EDUCATOR

  • Teaching and caring for our babies.
  • Enjoying being in the moment, being part of a child care setting.
  • Confidence in knowing I do my job to the best of my ability.

Through the eye of an Infant (0-2 years)

  • Discovering the world and exploring the environment.
  • Enjoying spending time with peers and educators, being in the moment.
  • Feeling safe in their environment to conquer milestones.

Through the eyes of a Toddler (2-3 years)

  • Trying new things out, understanding and experimenting with cause and effect.
  • Being able to grow into their own individual person.
  • Having a safe and secure environment to grow and learn.

Through the eyes of a Pre schooler (3-5 years)

  • Using your imagination to seek and make meaning of the world.
  • Forming friendships with peers enjoying their play.
  • Feeling confident and nurtured to learn in their environment.

Through the eyes of Afterschool Care (5-12 years)

  • Setting and accomplishing new challenges.
  • Taking part in enjoyable interactions with peers, educators.  Feeling they can be themselves and feel valued.
  • Enjoying being in the moment.
  • Being made to feel confident and to express themselves in their environment.

Through the eyes of a Family

  • Sharing experiences, going through changes together.
  • Being part of their children’s development, building relationships with their child’s educators.
  • Being supportive of one another.
  • BECOMING is about the learning and development that young children experience.  Children start to form their sense of identity from an early age, which shapes the type of adult they will become.

Becoming

At Currumbin Pines Early Learning we see becoming:

As an INDIVIDUAL

  • Aspiring to be something and working towards it.
  • Adapting to changes and experiences.  Learning who they are through different learning experiences.
  • How I can become a better person.
  • Where you see yourself in years to come and what you will do to get there.

As an EDUCATOR

  • Being in tune with what our babies want to do and facilitating it.
  • Becoming the best I can professionally be as an educator.  Constantly using reflective practice.
  • How can I better my skills and pass on my knowledge to the children.
  • How you grow into bettering yourself as an educator.

Through the eye of an Infant (0-2 years)

  • Feeling secure and loved and being able to play and develop under the guidance of caregivers.
  • Learning the foundations of life through educational milestones, “discovery”.
  • Going through the milestones of growth.
  • Learning new skills – crawling, standing, walking, talking.

Through the eyes of a Toddler (2-3 years)

  • Feeling confident with developing autonomy and being able to take risks in exploration and play.
  • Exploring new experiences in their new capability spectrum e.g. walking, what they can reach.
  • Getting confidence to try new things for self.
  • Discovering boundaries, talking more, communicating wants and dislikes.

Through the eyes of a Pre schooler (3-5 years)

  • Having the opportunity to make choices in play and learning experiences and having their thoughts valued with peers and educators.
  • Ideas of what they “want to be when they grow up” – comes from experiences in different environments.
  • Learning and becoming an individual with definite likes and dislikes, personalities blooming.
  • Readiness for school – feeling confident in who they are.

Through the eyes of Afterschool Care (5-12 years)

  • Becoming responsible, developing meaningful friendships, feeling valued by peers and having a voice.
  • New and exciting activities that stimulate the body mind appropriate to their age.
  • Figuring out who they are.
  • Becoming an individual whilst trying to remain part of a group.

Through the eyes of a Family

  • Loving each other unconditionally, being there for each other through all walks of life.
  • Growing together through different milestones, experiences and activities.
  • Readiness for school – feeling confident in who they are.
  • As families grow and change becoming one unit full of love and trust.

Play is Learning

Play is very important for children.  Through play babies and young children explore and learn to understand the world around them as they come to communicate, discover, imagine and create.  When children play they are showing what they have learned and what they are trying to understand.  This is why play is one of the foundations of the Early Years Learning Framework.  By using this framework, educators will guide your child’s play by carefully designing learning activities and stimulating indoor and outdoor learning environments.

Relationships are Key

It is well known that children learn best when they have secure relationships with caring adults.  When children from a very early age develop trusting relationships they feel more confident and able to explore and learn. Currumbin Pines Early Learning embraces the fact that when children feel emotionally secure they learn through play to develop the skills and understandings they need to interact positively with others and gradually learn to take responsibility.

The framework focuses on your child’s learning.  Educators will work with you in order to get to know your child well.  They will create a learning program that builds on your child’s interests and abilities, and keep you in touch with your child’s progress.

Through the framework’s five learning goals educators will assist your child to develop:

  • a strong sense of their identity
  • connections with their world
  • a strong sense of well being
  • confidence and involvement in their learning
  • effective communication skills.

Working Together

By working together with families, educators can enhance a child’s learning and well being.  As the most important person in your child’s life you can make a difference by talking regularly with your child’s early childhood educator and asking about your child’s learning.  Information you provide allows educators to link your child’s experiences at home with the time they spend together in the early childhood setting.

To find out more visit www.deewr.gov.au/earlychildhood

Research suggests that young children begin making generalisations about themselves as learners before reaching primary school. “The child’s attitudes, motivation, and initiative in learning situations derive in part from the child’s early interactions with others, especially from parents, educators and family. These reactions and interactions become internalised and serve as the basis for the child’s on sense of value as a learner, and their attitude and openness to learning” (1)

So how can we contribute to a child’s positive sense of self as a learner in both home and education environments? One effective method is by utilising Shared Sustained Thinking to engage and encourage children unique thoughts and learning processes.

What is Sustained Shared Thinking?

 

Sustained Shared Thinking (SST) is a term that might sound a bit complex, but it’s actually a simple and powerful way to boost children’s learning and development in early childhood and beyond. Essentially, it involves adults and children working together in a thoughtful and meaningful way to explore ideas, solve problems, and build understanding. This collaborative approach not only enhances cognitive skills but also strengthens social and emotional connections. By celebrating contribution to the process of learning, divergent thinking, creativity, problem solving through trial and error and collaboration with peers and adults, SST promotes a positive and inclusive framework for learning.

Let’s break it down

Sustained

Definition: “continuing for an extended period”

Although it’s the first word, it’s often the most overlooked when being implemented in a classroom or home setting. In order for the thinking to evolve it requires time, an opportunity to assess, revisit and revise. SST may start with an idea, an open ended question or a hypothesis, but it continues when those ideas and questions are given the time, space and resources to be properly explored, this could take days, weeks or even months.

Shared

Definition: “distributed between members of the group”

SST is a collaborative concept, it requires two or more people to contribute their thoughts and ideas as a way of scaffolding and pushing the thought process deeper than one could achieve alone. This may be an adult that provides prompts through open ended questions and small suggestions that prompt a child to think one stage further then they could alone, or two or more children who are adding different ideas to a group project or play scenario.

Thinking

Definition: “the process of considering or reasoning about something”

In the case of SST, the thinking happens out loud, adults can role model this by posing some thoughtful questions like “I wonder if… ” or “what would happen…”. The goal here is not to quickly answer the questions and move on, but to encourage problem solving, critical thinking, collaboration and engagement. We prompting deep thought and curiosity, that can lead to research and discovery.

Using SST to contribute to a child’s positive sense of self as a learner.

Self esteem is shaped by many factors, beginning early in life children start forming a sense of self based on how they see themselves, how others see them and how they compare themselves to others. Teaching and parenting techniques that focus on the outcomes, on doing things the “correct way” on knowing the “right” answers may bring children to reflect on their self as a learner based on these measures of success.

A child who is good at memorising facts, copying, and recreating artworks or ideas, may find this method affirming. While their peer who learns through hands on experimenting and discovery may feel they are falling behind.

By using SST, parents and educators can boost childrens self esteem no matter how they learn best. By learning alongside children, creating a journey to a wide range of potential outcomes and looking for answers in a range of ways and celebrating contribution children learn their knowledge and experiences can be meaningful.

So, with that in mind, let’s look at a real life example.

How Deep is the Ocean?

Pre-Kindy 2020 Project

Shared sustained thinking starts with a question or idea,  in this case “How deep is the ocean?” It’s a question asked of one of our Turtles children back in 2020 that started a year long inquiry into oceans. From deep sea trenches, Antarctica, coral seas and even rubbish islands, by utilising sustained shared thinking we were able to dive deep into collaborative learning.

At this point these children were 3-4 years old, their attention spans are generally quite short and their interests are vast and unique. So how do we sustain a long project?

The key for SST to work is to make the learning visible. By giving thought a visual home children can revisit their ideas, over long periods of time while continuing to follow their individual interests along the way. This project actually started in Antarctica, as the children were particularly interested in penguins at the time.

During this stage the thoughts were around “How cold is Antarctica?” “do people live there? “What other animals are there?”. The children built igloos, explored sensory ice trays, and read a range of books containing information to help form answers to these questions. As they moved to other ocean areas like coral reefs and the deep sea, the visual learning grew, creating a map of thoughts, ideas and shared knowledge that helped inform emergent questions.

By the time we had watched a video of a submersible reaching the deepest point in the ocean the children were so good at showing their idea process that they immediately set to work building their own robots. Using mediums they were comfortable with such as clay, playdough, paint, drawing, lego and mixed media sculptures the class spent over a month working on robots of their own before contributing to a group sculpture of a deep sea robot names “Sharkbot”.

What did we learn?

And how can you implement it at home.

Through sustained shared thinking, children learn to articulate their thoughts, listen to others, and engage in meaningful discussions. This method encourages curiosity, fosters a love for learning, helps develop essential skills that will benefit children throughout their lives and assists in building a positive sense of self, leading to improved self esteem.

As adults, it can be easy to become the holders of knowledge, or work to quickly answer a question. A quick google will tell you that the deepest point in the ocean is 11,000m, and just like that, the inquiry is over, but what has the child learned?

Instead, we aim to co-construct knowledge with children as investigators. How many different ways can we find the answers to a question? Do we know any experts in the field? Can we conduct experiments to gain a better understanding? Can we create a model to better understand?

At home this could be a whiteboard for ideas and questions, an investigation wall or a photo collage. Whatever your child’s interests and hobbies, be it a favourite book at story time, their daily walk in the park, their weekend visit to the beach, or even their favorite tv show. By engaging their curiosity you can help build their identity of themselves as a learner.

For example, you may ask your child what they’ve seen on you daily dog walk through the park before. Write down their answers then when you go on your next walk, act as investigators, taking photos of some of the key landmarks or animals along the way.

Adding these photos to a whiteboard and asking open ended questions like “where do you think those animals go at night?” Or “how do you think that bit hole got there?”.

From there your child may want to create a map of the park, so you can add the photos to the spots they’ve been seen, on the next walk they may notice some differences, which could bring up more questions to investigate.

These types of projects can last a long time, and even when they don’t seem interested, the visual learning board will often pull children back days/weeks or even months later with a new discovery.

The Take Away

  • Shared sustained thinking is an effective way to boost children’s self confidence as learners, who contribute their unique talents, knowledge and experiences to the process of group learning.
  • Making the learning visible on a whiteboard, wall, clipboard, etc helps children and adults revisit their thoughts to extend on them later.
  • In SST adults help children co-construct knowledge rather then giving or testing for answers
  • SST can be applied to everyday experiences like story time, a tv show, a walk through the park or to the beach. It can also stem from questions like “how far away is the moon?” Or “why can some birds swim?”

We asked a parent who uses this method at home, his top tips for implementing SST as a parent are:

“Next time your child asks a question consider these:

  • How can we co-construct knowledge?
  • Don’t google, think about what is around you to help in the enquiry, could you call a friend or relative with your child who could have knowledge to share?
  • Give the question your attention, write it down even if it means pulling over to find an old piece of paper to scribble on,
  • Remember, asking good questions is more valuable then the answer”

By practicing SST with your child, you can help form a life long love of learning, that focuses on finding answers rather than knowing answers. So no matter your child’s learning abilities or styles, they are able to form a positive sense of self as a learner.

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1) Defining the Self as a Learner for Children with LD, Augusta Gross

https://www.ldonline.org/ld-topics/self-esteem-stress-management/defining-self-learner-children-ld#:~:text=The%20child%20defines%20himself%20as,sibling%20or%20peer%20may%20be