Preschool

Personal, Social and Emotional Development

Making friends, sharing toys, solving epic playground disputes—skills for life, right there.

ELG: Self-Regulation

Kids who are right where they should be for their age?

You’ll spot them actually picking up on how they (and their friends) feel—sometimes even before you do. They’re starting to get a handle on their own moods, trying not to melt down when things don’t go their way. Sure, they might still pout, but hey, who doesn’t?

Setting little goals? Totally in their wheelhouse. Like, if they want that last cookie, they can (sometimes) wait their turn instead of grabbing it and running. Impulse control isn’t perfect—sometimes they’ll leap before they look—but you’ll see real progress.

Listening to the teacher? Yeah, mostly. Even when they’re elbows-deep in finger paint, they can tune in, pick up what’s said, and actually do what’s asked (even if it’s a multi-step thing like “put away your crayons, wash your hands, and line up at the door”).

Basically, they’re leveling up at paying attention and following directions—well, on a good day.

ELG: Managing Self

Kids who are right where they should be?

They’ll give new stuff a shot—no hesitation—and they don’t crumble when things get tough.

They bounce back and they keep going even if it gets messy.

You’ll hear them talking about why rules matter and, for the most part, they know what’s cool and what’s not—so they try to do the right thing.

Oh, and don’t forget the basics: they can handle their own bathroom business, get themselves dressed (shoelaces might be a struggle, but hey, who hasn’t been there?), and they actually get why eating veggies isn’t just some weird adult conspiracy.

ELG: Building Relationships

Kids who are on track for their age usually: 

Play nice (well, most of the time) and actually share or wait their turn instead of grabbing stuff. 

Get attached to grown-ups they trust, and start making real friends, not just random playmates. 

Notice when someone’s upset or needs help—and sometimes, shockingly, actually care. 

We learn to set Goals

Hour
Activity
08:30
Gymnastics
08:50
Breakfast
09:00
Circle time
09:15
Classes
10:15
Classes
11:30
Playing outside
Hour
Activity
12:30
Dinner
13:00
Dinner nap
15:00
Snack
15:30
Classes
16:15
Classes
17:00
Playing outside

Personal, Social, and Emotional Development is basically the secret sauce to raising happy, healthy little humans who don’t lose their minds at the drop of a crayon.

open group
open-group
Athletic abilities
open-group
Thinking
open-group
Communication skills
open-group
Research skills
Creative abilities
Broad mind

Those golden connections kids make

  • Those epic, heartwarming bonds with the grown-ups in their orbit. Think of it like emotional Wi-Fi—if the connection’s strong, everything else loads better. Kids basically copy-paste how adults deal with meltdowns (or, let’s be real, don’t deal with them), and that’s how they learn what feelings even are. “Oh, so I’m not actually exploding, I’m just mad because my tower got knocked over? Cool, good to know.”

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