Category Archives: Educational Programming

Child-Led Easter Learning in Early Childhood 

Easter can provide rich opportunities for learning in early childhood settings. However, traditional Easter activities in education and care services often rely on templates, identical crafts and teacher-directed outcomes. When every bunny, chick or egg looks the same, it can suggest that the adult controlled the experience rather than the child’s learning process.

High-quality practice under the National Quality Framework and the Early Years Learning Framework V2.0 requires educators to design learning experiences that respond to children’s interests, agency and curiosity.

Instead of asking: “What Easter craft will children make?”

Educators can ask: “What investigations, play opportunities and conversations might Easter inspire?”

When children are provided with open-ended materials, time, and genuine choice, Easter becomes a catalyst for creativity, inquiry, collaboration and meaningful learning.

How to Talk to Children Under 5 About the Bondi Beach Shootings in Australia

When something frightening happens in the world, it doesn’t stay on the news — it enters our homes, our workplaces, and our hearts. The recent events in Bondi have deeply shaken many adults, and even when we try to protect them, our youngest children feel it too.

Babies and young children do not understand headlines or details, but they are highly attuned to the emotions of the adults around them. They sense changes in tone, body language, routines, and emotional energy. When adults feel distressed, children often feel unsettled — even without words being spoken.

In early childhood education and at home, our role is not to explain tragedy, but to hold safety, calm, and connection. This article has been created to gently support educators and families in responding to children under five with reassurance, age-appropriate language, emotional safety, and compassion — while also recognising the importance of caring for ourselves as adults.

There are no perfect words in moments like these. What matters most is presence, predictability, and love.

On 14 December 2025, a mass shooting occurred at Bondi Beach in Sydney during a Hanukkah celebration, resulting in multiple deaths and injuries. Authorities have classified it as a terrorist attack with antisemitic motives and are continuing investigations.  

For adults, this is deeply upsetting — and young children can sense this distress even if they don’t understand the details. What they need most right now is reassurance, safety, and simplified, truthful communication.