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School Readiness Activities for Preschoolers: Childcare & Home Guide

activities for school readiness

As the first day of school approaches, it’s natural to wonder whether your child is ready. The truth is, school readiness isn’t about what children know — it’s about how they feel, how they cope, and how they connect with others. The skills that matter most are built gradually through everyday play, routine, and connection.

The good news? Childcare centres like Beginnings Early Learners in Sunbury and Alfredton build these skills every single day through play-based learning — and many of the same activities can be continued at home. This guide breaks down exactly what children learn in childcare settings and how you can support the same growth at home.

What Does School Readiness Mean?

School readiness means a child has the social, emotional, physical, and cognitive skills to participate confidently in a learning environment. It is not about being able to read or write perfectly before the first day. It’s about a child’s ability to:

  • Feel safe enough to try something new, even when it feels tricky
  • Follow simple directions and stay with a task until it’s done
  • Express needs, ideas, and emotions clearly
  • Handle a loss in a game or waiting for a turn without a total meltdown
  • Learn how to be alongside other children and build early friendships

Educators focus on building these skills gradually through structured play, routines, and supportive interactions.

How Do You Know If Your Child Is Ready for School?

Rather than ticking boxes on a checklist, look for general signs that your child is developing across social, emotional, and practical areas. Signs of readiness include:

  • They can follow a simple instruction without constant repetition
  • They show curiosity — asking questions and wanting to figure things out
  • They can play alongside or with other children, even if it isn’t always smooth
  • They’re beginning to manage basic routines such as getting dressed, tidying up, and sitting for a short activity with some support

If your child is still developing in some areas, that’s completely normal. Every child develops at their own pace, and school readiness is a journey, not a deadline.

What Are the 5 Areas of School Readiness?

School readiness is typically assessed across five key developmental domains. These are the areas educators and teachers look for when children begin formal schooling:

  • Social skills — sharing, turn-taking, and forming early friendships
  • Emotional readiness — managing big feelings, handling disappointment, and self-regulating
  • Language and literacy — vocabulary, listening, storytelling, and early reading foundations
  • Fine motor skills — hand strength and coordination needed for writing, cutting, and drawing
  • Independence and self-care — managing routines, dressing, lunchboxes, and problem-solving

All five areas are developed naturally through play-based learning — which is exactly how we approach early education at Beginnings Early Learners.

What Age Should a Child Be School Ready?

In Victoria, children typically start Prep at around 5 years of age. However, school readiness is not purely about age — children develop at different rates, and a few months’ difference can be significant in the early years. If you have concerns about your child’s readiness, speaking with your childcare educators or a paediatrician is always a good first step.

School Readiness Activities: What Childcare Does and How to Try Them at Home

Here’s a breakdown of the key school readiness activities used in childcare settings — and practical ways to continue them at home.

1. Social Skills Through Group Play

Sharing, turn-taking, and connecting with peers

At Childcare
Small group play with guided cooperation
Educators narrate and model conflict resolution in real time
Dramatic play corners where children negotiate roles
Board games that practise turn-taking and graceful losing
At Home
Organise regular playdates — even 45 minutes makes a difference
Play Snakes & Ladders, Uno, or simple card games after dinner
Name emotions calmly: “You both want it — let’s think together”
Encourage sibling or cousin play with minimal adult direction

Parent tip: When two children disagree, don’t rush to step in. Give them a moment to work it out themselves. This is where real social learning happens.

2. Fine Motor Skill Development

Strengthening the hands that will write

At Childcare
Playdough rolling, squeezing, and cutting with tools
Threading beads and lacing cards
Tearing paper for collages and art projects
Painting with brushes of varying sizes
Pouring, scooping, and transferring activities
At Home
Keep playdough on the bench — it’s the best 5-minute activity
Let them tear lettuce, open snack packets, pour their own drink
Let them try squeezing toothpaste (great fine motor practice)
Scissors + old magazines = a genuinely engaging afternoon

Parent tip: Strong hands come from daily use. Any activity that involves pinching, gripping, or squeezing is building the muscles children need to write.

3. Language and Literacy

Vocabulary, storytelling, and listening

At Childcare
Daily read-aloud with open discussion questions Educators narrate activities as they happen
Singing songs and rhymes to build phonological awareness
Dramatic play that encourages storytelling and dialogue
Asking open questions: “What do you think happens next?”
At Home
10 minutes of reading together every night
Narrate your day: “I’m chopping the carrots — hear that crunchy sound?”
Ask “what, how, why” questions rather than yes/no ones
Play audio stories in the car to build listening stamina
Sing nursery rhymes together — rhythm builds early reading skills

Parent tip: Children who arrive at school with a rich vocabulary settle into reading far more quickly. The single most powerful thing you can do is talk with your child.

4. Independence and Self-Care

Doing for themselves with quiet confidence

At Childcare
Children serve their own food and clear their own plates
Encouraged to manage bathroom routines independently
Pack and unpack their own bag each day
Attempt to resolve small problems before asking an adult
Put on and take off shoes and jackets independently
At Home
Slow down and let them try — even if it takes three times as long
Have a consistent spot for their bag, shoes, and water bottle
Practise opening their lunchbox and drink bottle before school starts
A morning routine chart with pictures helps build independence
Assign one small chore they own — clearing their plate or feeding a pet

Parent tip: A child who can manage themselves physically arrives at school feeling capable. Practise the lunchbox before day one, not at the last minute.

5. Emotional Readiness

Managing big feelings before they manage you

At Childcare
Educators co-regulate by sitting with children through big emotions
Feelings charts displayed at the child’s eye level
Calm corners available throughout the day
Simple breathing strategies taught and practised daily
Acknowledging disappointment without rushing past it
At Home
Name emotions without judgement: “You seem frustrated — that makes sense”
Create a small calm corner: a cushion, book, or fidget toy
Model your own emotional regulation: “I’m stressed — I’m going to breathe”
Read picture books about emotions — they open real conversations
Avoid dismissing or rushing through emotional moments

Parent tip: Emotional readiness is the most underestimated school readiness skill. A child who can manage disappointment will navigate the classroom far more successfully than one who only knows their letters.

6. Attention and Concentration

Staying with a task long enough to learn

At Childcare
Gradually increasing circle time duration across the year
Completing a craft or project before moving to the next activity
Listening to multi-step instructions in group activities
Encouraging children to finish puzzles and building sets
Following consistent daily routines that build anticipation and focus
At Home
Play audiobooks or simple stories to build listening skills
Encourage your child to finish small craft tasks before moving on
Avoid interrupting when they’re deeply focused on play
Keep daily routines consistent so your child knows what to expect
Give two-step instructions: “Put your shoes on, then get your bag”

Parent tip: When a child is deeply absorbed in something, resist the urge to interrupt. That quiet focus is exactly what classrooms need.

How Can I Prepare My Child for School at Home?

The most effective things parents can do at home to prepare their child for school don’t require flashcards or workbooks. Focus on:

  • Reading together every day — even 10 minutes builds vocabulary and listening skills
  • Practising routines — dressing, packing a bag, opening a lunchbox independently
  • Playing games that involve turn-taking and managing outcomes
  • Talking openly about emotions and modelling how to handle frustration
  • Giving your child small, achievable responsibilities at home

These everyday moments build the foundation that formal schooling needs to rest on. For more ideas, see our article on sensory play activities and how they support fine motor development.

Ready to Give Your Child the Best Start in Sunbury or Alfredton?

If you’d like support in preparing your child for a smooth and confident start to school, the team at Beginnings Early Learners is here to help. Our Reggio Emilia-inspired program, integrated Kindergarten, and experienced educators work together to build independence, curiosity, and confidence in a nurturing environment across our Sunbury and Alfredton centres.

We’d love to show you around. Book a tour at a time that suits you.

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