Pre-School Learning

Easy activities parents can do at home

The NI Pre‑School Curriculum is built around play‑based, holistic learning that supports children’s natural development and curiosity.

Below is a simple, ready‑to‑use sheet you can print or keep on your phone.

1. Personal, social & emotional development

Goal: Build confidence, independence, friendships, and emotional awareness.

Try at home:

  • Feelings Talk: Ask “How are you feeling today?” and let your child choose or draw an emotion face.
  • Helping Hands: Give small responsibilities (tidy toys, help set table).
  • Play Dates: Encourage sharing and turn‑taking through play.

Goal: Develop coordination, balance, strength, and fine motor control.

Try at home:

  • Gross Motor Play: Jumping, hopping, dancing to music.
  • Fine Motor Fun: Threading beads, using tweezers to pick up pasta, playdough squeezing.  Bing Videos
  • Outdoor Time: Nature walk, ball‑throwing, climbing safely.

Goal: Build listening, communication, early literacy, and vocabulary skills.

Try at home:

  • Story Time: Read daily; talk about pictures and ask “What do you think happens next?”
  • Chatty Moments: Describe what you see on walks (“Look! A big red bus!”).
  • Name Writing Practice: Encourage drawing and mark‑making—they don’t need perfect letters yet.

Goal: Develop early number, shape, pattern and problem‑solving skills.

Try at home:

  • Sorting Games: Sort toys by colour, size, type.
  • Counting Everywhere: Count steps, apples, cars driving by.
  • Pattern Play: Make simple patterns with blocks or socks (e.g., red‑blue‑red‑blue).

Goal: Encourage creativity, imagination, music, and expressive play.

Try at home:

  • Art Station: Crayons, paints, collage materials—focus on creativity, not the end product.
  • Music Time: Sing nursery rhymes, clap rhythms, dance freely.
  • Imaginative Play: Dress‑up, pretend shops, puppet shows.

Goal: Develop awareness of the environment, people, nature, and early science concepts.

Try at home:

  • Nature Hunt: Look for leaves, insects, clouds—talk about what you notice.
  • Water Play: Pouring, measuring, floating/sinking objects.
  • Real‑World Involvement: Bake together, plant seeds, explore how things work.

Short, natural play-based chunks that fit real family life.

  • Free play (20–30 mins)
  • Story time (10 mins)
  • Outdoor play (20 mins)
  • Creative activity (10–15 mins)
  • Snack + self-help skills (independence practice)
  • Calm time/quiet play (10 mins)

Parents can keep these in mind during everyday interactions:

Pre-School English

1. Listening & attention

Goal: Help your child listen carefully, follow simple instructions, and tune into sounds.

Try at home:

  • Listening Walk: Go outside and listen for birds, cars, wind, dogs. Ask: “What did you hear?”
  • Simple Instruction Games: “Touch your toes… now find something red.”
  • Sound Matching: Make animal noises; let your child guess the animal.

Goal: Build vocabulary, encourage conversation, and help children express ideas.

Try at home:

  • Daily Chat: Talk about everyday life — shopping, cooking, getting dressed.
  • Open Questions: “What was your favourite part of today?”, “What do you think will happen next?”
  • New Words Game: Introduce words like smooth, bumpy, gigantic during play.

Goal: Develop an interest in books, storytelling, and understanding print.

Try at home:

  • Shared Reading: Read daily. Pause to talk about pictures, characters, feelings.
  • Prediction Play: “What do you think happens next?”
  • Environmental Print: Point out signs, labels, logos when out and about.

Goal: Encourage drawing, scribbling, and early attempts at writing — all important pre‑writing skills.

Try at home:

  • Drawing Time: Provide crayons, chalk, paint — let them explore freely.
  • Name Play: Write your child’s name and let them trace or cover letters with stickers.
  • Writing in Different Materials: Shaving foam, sand, mud, rice trays.

Goal: Help children notice sounds in words — the earliest step before phonics.

Try at home:

  • Rhyme Time: Sing rhyming songs (Twinkle Twinkle, Humpty Dumpty).
  • Silly Rhymes: Make up rhymes together: “cat–hat–zat–brat!”
  • Sound Spotting: Play “I spy” using sounds, not letters: “I spy with my little eye something beginning with mmmm”.

Goal: Build storytelling, vocabulary, and confidence expressing ideas.

Try at home:

  • Role Play: Shops, doctors, superheroes, cafés — encourage conversation.
  • Puppet Stories: Use teddies to retell favourite stories.
  • Story Builder: Start a sentence and let your child finish it:
    “Once upon a time there was a tiny dragon who…”
  • Morning chat: Talk about plans for the day
  • Story time: 10 minutes
  • Play: Pretend play or small toy storytelling
  • Outdoor listening walk: Even 5 minutes
  • Mark‑making moment: Drawing or tracing
  • Bedtime story: Relaxing language exposure

Pre-School Maths

1. Counting & number awareness

Goal: Help your child recognise small quantities, begin counting, and understand “how many”.

Try at home:

  • Count Together: Count steps, apples, cars, toys during tidy-up time.
  • Snack Maths: “How many grapes do you have? If you eat one, how many left?”
  • Number Hunt: Look for numbers on doors, buses, shops, remote controls.

Goal: Build early problem‑solving by grouping items based on similarities.

Try at home:

  • Laundry Sorting: Sort socks by colour/pattern.
  • Toy Sorting: Sort toy animals by size or type.
  • Nature Sorting: Leaves, stones, sticks — sort by size, colour, texture.

This supports the curriculum focus on early categorisation and problem‑solving through hands‑on play.

Goal: Help children notice shapes, spatial language, and properties of objects.

Try at home:

  • Shape Hunt: Find circles, squares, and triangles around the house.
  • Building: Use blocks or boxes to build towers — talk about tall, short, under, on top.

Puzzle Play: Jigsaws encourage shape recognition and matching (highlighted in NI pre‑school guidance).

Goal: Support early reasoning by recognising and creating patterns.

Try at home:

  • Simple Patterns: Make sock patterns (stripy/plain/stripy/plain), or block patterns.
  • Rhythm Patterns: Clap‑clap‑tap, clap‑clap‑tap — ask your child to copy.
  • Nature Patterns: Arrange stones/leaves into repeating sequences.

Goal: Build awareness of size, weight, capacity, and comparison.

Try at home:

  • Water Play: Use containers to explore full/empty/half-full.
  • Size Talk: Compare “bigger/smaller”, “heavier/lighter” using toys or groceries.
  • Baking Together: Pouring, measuring, and scooping help develop mathematical language.

These kinds of experiences are encouraged in the NI curriculum through real-life, play‑based activities.

Goal: Encourage thinking skills, decision-making, and perseverance.

Try at home:

  • Construction Challenges: “Can you build a bridge for your car?”
  • Obstacle Courses: Work out how to get over/under/around objects.
  • Everyday Questions: “How can we share these biscuits so we both have the same?”

The NI guidance emphasises ongoing problem‑solving and hands‑on learning opportunities to build reasoning skills.

  • Morning: Count steps downstairs
  • Playtime: Sorting toys or blocks
  • Snack: Share food fairly
  • Outdoor Time: Spot shapes and numbers
  • Bath Time: Capacity play with cups
  • Bedtime: A counting or shape book

Links To Activities