Foundation Stage

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The Foundation Stage is the government label for education for pupils aged 3 to 5 in England. The Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) published “Curriculum Guidance for the Foundation Stage” in 2000, and is the document upon which all Foundation Stage provision is planned, and which outlines the expected learning for pupils of this age.

The introduction of a Foundation Stage was a significant landmark in education. The early years were given a distinct identity, and a more detailed, focussed curriculum, where the emphasis is on learning through planned play activities.

The guidance states that through well-planned play, both indoors and outdoors, children can: · Explore, develop and represent learning experiences that help them make sense of the world · Practice and build up ideas, concepts and skills · Learn how to control impulses and understand the need for rules · Be alone, be alongside others, or cooperate as they talk or rehearse their feelings · Take risks and make mistakes · Think creatively and imaginatively · Communicate with others as they investigate or solve problems · Express fears or relive anxious experiences in controlled and safe situations


The curriculum is organised into six areas of learning: · Personal, social and emotional development · Communication, language and literacy · Mathematical development · Knowledge and Understanding of the World · Physical development · Creative development

These six areas help practitioners to plan the learning environment and the activities provided within it, but this does not mean that children learn in these separate subject-based areas. Very often, a well-planned activity can promote children’s development and understanding in several areas simultaneously.

In order for practitioners to plan a curriculum that will ensure attainment of the early learning goals for the majority of children at the end of the reception year, a series of stepping stones are provided. These stepping stones identify the developing knowledge, skills, understanding and attitudes that children need if they are to achieve the goals at the end of the foundation stage.

For babies and children aged from birth to three, a separate framework named "Birth to Three Matters" was created to support those practitioners working with very young children and babies. Certain principles underpin the framework, for example, that parents and family are central to the well-being of the child, and that a relationship with a key person at home and in the setting is essential to young children's well-being. Most importantly, the framework emphasised that children learn most effectively when, with the support of a knowledgeable and trusted adult, they are actively involved and interested. In other words, children learn by doing rather than by being told.

In 2007, a new curriculum combining the two frameworks (Foundation Stage and Birth to Three Matters) will be introduced, with considerable training and support available to early years practitioners in all settings. This is to be called the Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS) and will become statutory in September 2008.


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