Teaching Infant and Toddler Education

High-quality infant and toddler pedagogy differs greatly from preschool practice. It is mainly peaceful, polite, and relational (Dean & Gillespie, 2015; Kaywork, 2020; The Education Hub, 2018). Modern Australian and global frameworks emphasise that infants and toddlers learn through rich sensory-play experiences, real-life everyday moments, and responsive parenting rather than formal teaching (Arthur et al., 2024; Masterson, 2018). 

Fundamental Pedagogical Ideas: 

  • Relationships are the curriculum: All learning occurs primarily through “serve-and-return” relationships and secure connection (Harding, 2023; McLean, 2016). 
  • Slow, respectful routines: feeding, sleeping, and changing diapers are viewed as rich learning opportunities rather than “care tasks” (RIE & Pikler methods; Kaywork, 2020). 
  • Intentionality in the everyday: Teachers prepare and think carefully about routine moments (ACECQA, 2023). 
  • Play as the primary activity: Unrestricted, sensory-rich play is extended and safeguarded (ECA Statement on Play, 2023). 
  • Perception of the child as competent: According to Degotardi et al. (2015) and Nolan & Raban (2015), infants and toddlers are seen as active researchers and meaning-makers. 

KEY TEACHING STRATEGIES (aligned with 0-3 critical competencies and NQS 1.2) 

STRATEGY  DESCRIPTION AND EXAMPLE  LINK TO THEORY/FRAMEWORK 
RESPONSIVE CAREGIVING  Notice- respond- extend cycles (e.g., infant reaches for rattle- educator moves it slightly- infant tries again)  Serve-and-return (Harding, 2023). 
POSITIONING AND NARRATION  Narrate children’s actions respectfully (You’re watching the light on the wall- it’s moving when the curtain moves).   Scaffolding (Vygotsky via Nolan & Raban, 2015). 
PRIMARY CAREGIVING/KEY EDUCATOR SYSTEM  One educator builds deep relationship with small group of children and families.  Attachment theory (Circle of security; McLean, 2016) 
CONTINUITY OF CARE  Children stay with the same educator from birth to three years.  Reduces stress, supports secure base (Harper-Browne & Raikes, 2012) 
SENSORY-RICH, OPEN-ENDED ENVIRONMENT  Treasure baskets, natural loose parts, mirrors at floor level.  Heuristic play (Goldschmied) & Piaget sensorimotor stage 
WAIT, TIME AND WATCHING  Slow down, observe, and allow children to initiate.  Respectful practice (Pikler; Kaywork, 2020). 
CO-CONSTRUCTION OF KNOWLEDGE  Follow children’s focus and add slight challenge (“You found the red block- here’s another red one”)  Sociocultural theory (Vygotsky). 
DOCUMENTATION OF LEARNING  Learning stories, photos, floorbooks that make thinking visible.  EYLF Practice: Learning through play and intentional teaching (ACECQA, 2023). 
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