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Practical Examples Of EYLF Outcomes

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From: Aussie Childcare Network

Practical Examples Of EYLF Outcomes Image by jcomp on Freepik

The EYLF Learning Outcomes are broad and observable. They acknowledge that children learn in a variety of ways and vary in their capabilities and pace of learning. Children’s learning is ongoing acknowledge that children learn in a variety of ways. The following article provides practical examples of each individual learning outcome that children will progress towards in different and equally meaningful ways. 

Outcome 1: Children have a strong sense of identity

1.1 Safety & Security

  • Attachments
  • Routines/transitions
  • Belong
  • Comfort/support
  • Respect/trust
  • Express feelings & ideas
  • Initiate interactions
  • Explore and engage
  • Play
  • Explore identity through role play

1.2 Emerging autonomy, inter-dependence, resilience & a sense of agency

  • Awareness of the rights and needs of others
  • Awareness of the rights and needs of others
  • Open to challenges
  • Cooperate/work collaboratively
  • Take risks
  • Cope with the unexpected
  • Recognise own unexpected
  • Recognise other's achievements
  • Self-regulate
  • Confidence
  • Being sharing behaviours
  • Persist

3.3 Develop knowledgeable and confident self-identities

  • Accepted for who they are
  • Explore identities through dramatic play
  • Share Culture
  • Use home language
  • Develop a social and cultural heritage
  • Engage with Elders & community members
  • Companionship
  • Celebrate

3.4 Interact with care, empathy and respect towards others

  • Show interest in others
  • Be part of a group
  • Share play experiences
  • Express emotions constructively
  • Empathise with others
  • Express concern for others
  • Be aware of their perspectives
  • Respect other's perspectives
  • Reflect on your own actions
  • Consider consequences

Outcome 2: Children are connected to and contribute to their world

2.1 Sense of belong to groups & communities, reciprocal rights & responsibilities

  • Right to Belong
  • Cooperate with others
  • Negotiate roles in the play
  • Participate in social groups
  • Understanding of the world
  • Express opinions
  • Explore other's ways of being
  • Reciprocal relationships “read" the behaviours of others
  • Respond appropriately
  • Contribute in different ways
  • Sense of belonging
  • Be playful
  • Respond positively to other
  • Contribute to fair decision making

2.2 Respond to diversity with respect

  • Show concern for others.
  • Explore diversity
  • Become aware of connections
  • Similarities & differences
  • Listen to others' ideas
  • Respect different ways of doing
  • Practice inclusive ways

2.3 Become aware of fairness

  • Explore connections among people
  • Be aware of ways people are included/excluded
  • Recognise unfairness & bias
  • Act with compassion & kindness
  • Make choices/problem solve
  • Think critically about fair/unfair behaviour
  • Understand how texts construct identities & create stereotypes

2.4 Become socially responsible & show respect for the environment

  • Play news ideas
  • Participate to solve problems
  • Contribute to group outcomes
  • Know, respect, care appreciate natural environments
  • Know, respect, care appreciate constructed environments
  • Explore, inter, predict & hypothesise/ interdependence land, people, plants & animals
  • Relationships - living & non-living
  • Notice & respond to the charge
  • Awareness of the impact of human activity
  • Interdependence of living things

Outcome 3: children have a strong sense of wellbeing

3.1 Strength in Social and Emotional Wellbeing

  • Trust/confidence
  • Share humour, happiness & satisfaction
  • Be comforted by others during distress, confusion, challenges
  • Make new discoveries
  • Celebrate own effort
  • Celebrate the efforts of others
  • Cooperate & work collaboratively
  • Enjoy solitude
  • Recognise own achievements
  • Make choice
  • Accept challenges
  • Take considered risk
  • Manage change
  • Cope with frustrations
  • Cope with the unexpected
  • Understand one emotion
  • Self-regulate
  • Manage emotions
  • Experience & share personal successes
  • Acknowledge & accept affirmations
  • Assets own capabilities and independence
  • Be aware of the needs and rights of others
  • Recognise contributions to shared projects

3.2 Take responsibility for own health & wellbeing

  • Recognise & communicate bodily needs.
  • Happy, healthy, safe & connected to others
  • Sensory motor skills
  • Movement patterns
  • Gross & fine motor
  • Balance
  • Spatial equipment
  • Manage tools
  • Respond through movements
  • Healthy lifestyles
  • Good nutrition
  • Personal hygiene
  • Own safety & safety of others
  • Physical play
  • Negotiate play spaces safety

Outcome 4: Children are confident & involved learners

4.1 Learning dispositions such as curiosity, cooperation, creativity, commitment, enthusiasm, persistence, imagination, reflectivity

  • Express wonder/interest
  • Curious, enthusiastic participants
  • Investigate, imagine and explore ideas through play
  • Follow on and extend your own interests
  • Initiate and contribute to play experiences
  • Participate in inquiry-based experiences
  • Persevere & persist with difficult tasks
  • Experience satisfaction

4.2 Develop problem-solving, inquiry, experimentation, hypothesising, researching, and investigating

  • Apply thinking strategies
  • Engage with solutions
  • Adapt strategies
  • Create & use representation
  • Use mathematical ideas, concepts, language, and symbols
  • Make predictions & generalisations
  • Cause & effect
  • Trail & error
  • Motion
  • Reflective thinking

4.3 Transfer & adapt learning from one context to another

  • Co-construct learning
  • Mirror, respect and practise the actions of others
  • Make connections
  • Use the process of play, reflection & Investigation
  • Apply generalisations
  • Transfer knowledge

4.4 Connect with people, places, technologies and natural & processes materials

  • Engage in learning relationships
  • Use senses
  • Sharing learning, exploration
  • Explore tools, media, sounds, and graphics
  • Take apart, assemble, invent, construct
  • Experiment with different technologies
  • Use information and communication technologies
  • Use information and communication technologies (ICT)
  • Imagination, creativity & play
  • Use feedback to revise and build on an idea

Outcome 5: Children are effective communications

5.1 Interact verbally & non-verbally

  • Enjoy interactions
  • Convey & construct messages
  • Use language & representations
  • Play, music, art
  • Give cultural cues
  • Independent Communicators - Australian Standard English & home language
  • Meet listeners' needs
  • Build on home/family community literacies
  • Measurements & number
  • Use vocabulary to describe size, length, volume, capacity, & names of numbers
  • Express ideas & feelings
  • Communicate thinking about quantities
  • Describe attributes of products
  • Explain mathematical ideas
  • Convey meaning in at least one language

5.2 Engage with and gain meaning from a range of texts

  • Listen/respond to sounds & patterns
  • View/listen/respond to multimedia texts
  • Sing/chant rhymes, jingles & songs
  • Be literacy/numeracy users in play
  • Sound of language, letter-sound relationship, the concept of print, the structure of texts
  • Analyse the meaning of texts
  • Share the enjoyment of language
  • Recognise/engage with written & oral culturally constructed texts.

5.3 Express ideas and make meaning using a range of media

  • Engage in play Imagine, and create role, scripts & ideas
  • Share stories & symbols of your own culture
  • Re-enact well-known stories
  • Use creative arts - drawing, painting, sculpture, drama, music & storytelling.
  • Experiment with a range of media

5.4 Being to understand how symbol & pattern systems work

  • Use symbols in play
  • Make connections & see patterns
  • Predict patterns in routine/passing of time
  • Symbols as a means to communicate
  • Relationships between oral. Written & visual representations
  • Recognise patterns
  • Sort, categorise, order & compare
  • Listen/respond to sounds/patterns in speech/stories, rhyme
  • Dare on the memory of a sequence to complete a task
  • Being to use images & approximations of letters/words
  • Use symbols for meaning

5.5 Use information technologies to access information, investigate ideas represent thinking

  • Identify the use of technologies
  • Use real or imaginary technologies in play
  • Use ICT to access images & information
  • Use ICT to explore diverse perspectives
  • Use ICT to make sense of the world
  • Use ICT for designs, drawing editing, reflecting, composing
  • Engage with technology to make meaning

Further Reading

Free EYLF Version 2.0 Posters and Cheat Sheets - The following provides a list of cheat sheets and free printables based on EYLF Outcomes Version 2.0. These can be used as a reference point for Educators. They can also be used to refer to when documenting and planning. 

Printed from AussieChildcareNetwork.com.au