Begin Here

Getting Started

Language & Literacy Starting with their own name
Mathematics Hands-on counting and sorting
Social-Emotional Learning A child who knows their feelings
Practical Life A morning ritual they will love

At a Glance

This Month

Two weeks from now, your child will trace and spell their own name with pride, have words for their feelings, and look forward to a morning learning ritual that feels like theirs. This guide is where your Koala Grove year begins — not tied to any calendar month, but to the moment you decide to start. You do not need a teaching background. You need fifteen minutes a day, a willing child, and this guide.

This Week Who We Are

Every activity this week connects to identity — the child's name unlocks literacy, their feelings anchor social-emotional learning, and counting bears introduces the maths tool you'll use all year. This week builds the foundation everything else grows from.

  • 💭 What makes your name special — do you know why your family chose it?
  • 💭 Which of your five senses do you think you would miss the most?
  • 💭 What is one thing about you that you think nobody else knows?
  • 💭 If you could be any animal for a day, which would you choose and why?
Today

Pick any activity from Core Experiences or Skill Builders below.

Month Overview

Two weeks from now, your child will trace and spell their own name with pride, have words for their feelings, and look forward to a morning learning ritual that feels like theirs. This guide is where your Koala Grove year begins — not tied to any calendar month, but to the moment you decide to start. You do not need a teaching background. You need fifteen minutes a day, a willing child, and this guide.

Key Language & Literacy

Name recognition, print awareness, first letters

Your child's own name is the most powerful first word in literacy — deeply personal and always motivating. By the end of Week 1, they will recognise it in print and want to show everyone they meet.

Key Mathematics

Counting to 5, sorting by colour, first number sense

Counting bears, sorting by colour, finding numbers around the room — early maths is hands-on, playful, and already everywhere in your home. These sessions build the number confidence that grows through the whole year.

Key Social-Emotional Learning + Practical Life

Identity, feelings, morning circle, daily rhythm

A child who can name their feelings is a child who can manage them. These two weeks establish the morning circle, the feelings vocabulary, and the daily rhythm that make every month that follows feel safe and purposeful.

A Note on Pacing

Rest Weeks are part of the system

Every 6–8 weeks, take a full Rest Week — no sessions, no tracking. Rest is not falling behind. The Annual Curriculum Map marks suggested pause points across the year.

A Note on Philosophy

You don't need to choose a teaching philosophy

Koala Grove draws on Montessori, Reggio Emilia, structured phonics, and developmental psychology — the methods most supported by research for ages 3–6. The curriculum holds the theory so you don't have to. Your job is simply to follow your child.

This month's 20 experiences are designed for 3–5 learning sessions per week over 4 weeks. Adjust pacing based on your child's engagement and your family schedule.

↓ Setup & Planning — readiness, materials, zones & daily rhythm

Weekly Plan

Week 1 Who We Are

Every activity this week connects to identity — the child's name unlocks literacy, their feelings anchor social-emotional learning, and counting bears introduces the maths tool you'll use all year. This week builds the foundation everything else grows from.

What You May Need 5 items
First Morning Circle
Feelings Chart Introduction
Weekend extension

Spell the child's name with fridge magnets, pasta, or chalk; ask 'Which sense are we using right now?' at dinner.

  • Read one picture book about names or feelings — Chrysanthemum is perfect — and ask what makes their name special.
  • Play a name-matching game with index cards for family members' names.
  • Trace the child's name together with a finger on their back — how many letters can they feel?
  • 💭 What makes your name special — do you know why your family chose it?
  • 💭 Which of your five senses do you think you would miss the most?
  • 💭 What is one thing about you that you think nobody else knows?
  • 💭 If you could be any animal for a day, which would you choose and why?

If your child is pointing out their own name on their door, a drawing, or a favourite book — that spark of recognition is exactly where your Koala Grove journey is meant to begin.

Skill Builders

Short, low-prep activities that reinforce what your child is learning this month. Slot them in between core experiences or use them on lighter days.

Week 1 2 activities

Letters A & B Literacy

Explore letters A and B through tracing, songs, and spotting the letter in familiar words around the home.

What to say Try: 'This is the letter A — let's trace it together and listen for the /a/ sound. Can you find an A anywhere in the room?'
What to look for Whether child can connect letter shape to its sound and whether they attempt the search independently. Interest in finding the letter beyond the session is a strong early sign.
Connects to: Language & Literacy, phonological awareness
Sort Bears Maths

Sort counting bears or substitutes by colour, then count each group with one-to-one touch.

What to say Try: 'Can you put all the bears that look the same into their own group? Then let's count each group — touch every bear as you count.'
What to look for Whether child sorts by a single attribute without prompting and counts with genuine one-to-one correspondence, touching each bear as they say the number.
Connects to: Mathematics, classification, one-to-one correspondence

Week 2 4 activities

Learning Guidelines

Create and display your shared learning guidelines together — the agreements that make your learning sessions work.

What to say Try: 'What do we need so that learning feels good for both of us? Let's write your ideas down and make them ours.'
What to look for Child engages with genuine ownership — their words, their ideas. Notice whether they refer back to the guidelines unprompted in later sessions.
Connects to: Social-Emotional Learning, self-regulation, belonging
All About Me Book Literacy

Complete and share the All About Me book — a treasured first literacy document in the child's own words and drawings.

What to say Try: 'This book is all about you — the most important person in this story. What do you most want people to know when they read it?'
What to look for Child shows pride and personal investment in the finished book. Notice whether they want to share it with others — a sign that the work feels genuinely theirs.
Connects to: Language & Literacy, identity, early writing
Count Around the Room Maths

Walk through your learning space counting objects — chairs, books, windows, plants. Make counting part of the room itself.

What to say Try: 'Let's be counting explorers — walk around and find something to count. Touch each one as we go and tell me the total.'
What to look for Whether child counts with one-to-one correspondence as they move through the space and whether they begin initiating their own counting finds unprompted.
Connects to: Mathematics, counting, environment awareness
ABC Review Literacy Review

Revisit the letters covered so far using matching games, quick card checks, and playful repetition.

What to say Try: 'Let's go through these letter cards — show me all the ones you know straight away, as fast as you like.'
What to look for Speed and confidence compared to first encounters — signs of genuine consolidation rather than slow, laboured recall. Note which letters feel automatic and which still need more time.
Connects to: Language & Literacy, letter recognition
Setup & Planning

Readiness

This guide works for every child, regardless of what they already know. Follow the child's lead, not a checklist.

Ages 3–4
  • Recognises own name and may identify 1–3 familiar letters
  • Counts to 3–5 with some support
  • Names basic emotions like happy, sad, and angry
  • Enjoys mark-making, painting, and simple games
Ages 4–5
  • Recognises name in print and most letters of the alphabet
  • Counts to 5 independently and is extending to 10
  • Names emotions with words and is beginning to express why they feel them
  • Draws simple faces and figures with recognisable features
Ages 5–6
  • Recognises and attempts to write own name
  • Counts reliably to 5 with one-to-one correspondence
  • Names and expresses 5+ emotions with words
  • Draws with intention and creates recognisable self-portraits

Set the Stage

Learning Zones

Morning Circle Spot

Choose one consistent spot — a rug, a cushion, or a corner. Display the child's name in large letters. Add a feelings chart at child height. Keep it simple and return to it every day.

Reading Nook

Feature books about names, feelings, and belonging — Chrysanthemum, The Dot, and All Are Welcome are perfect starting points.

Creation Table

Finger paints, large paper, crayons, glue stick, and blank All About Me book pages. Keep the table clear and ready between sessions.

Discovery Station

A mirror at child height, five sensory items, and the feelings chart create a simple but rich first science and social-emotional space.

Daily Rhythm

Match the session length to your day — everything else stays the same.

Full Day 75–90 min
  1. Morning Circle Gather, greet the day, and preview what's ahead
  2. Core Experience The main hands-on activity for this session
  3. Free Exploration Unstructured play with materials from the activity
  4. Read-Aloud A picture book connected to the week's theme
  5. Creative Expression Drawing, painting, or making in response to the experience
  6. Closing Ritual Reflect on the session, tidy up, celebrate one win
Short Session 30–40 min
  1. Morning Circle Gather, greet the day, and preview what's ahead
  2. Core Experience The main hands-on activity for this session
  3. Read-Aloud A picture book connected to the week's theme
First Days 15–20 min

Pick one:

  1. Read one picture book and ask one open question. That is a complete first day.
  2. Do Name Art together. That is a complete first learning session.
  3. Have morning circle, name the feelings chart, and count five objects. That is a full session.
Just Life no schedule needed

These are not learning activities — and that is the point.

  • Meals & snacks together
  • Outdoor free play
  • Rest or nap time
  • Screen time (if used)
  • Errands, chores, and everyday life
Month Reflection

Progress Tracker & Reflection

This tracker is for your own quiet observation — not a report card. Mark what you notice. Three levels are available for each milestone: Exploring (just starting to engage), Growing (doing it with some support), and Flying (doing it confidently and independently). There is no wrong answer. Every child moves at their own pace.

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