How Play Is Learning: Supporting Children’s Growth Through Meaningful Moments
November 29, 2025
“Play is often talked about as if it were a relief from serious learning. But for children, play is serious learning. Play is really the work of childhood.”
Fred Rogers

Early childhood educators have known this truth long before research caught up: children learn best through play. Whether they are building with blocks, pretending to run a restaurant, or collecting leaves outside, play gives children the space to explore, solve problems, collaborate, imagine, and make sense of their world.

Understanding that play matters is only the start. The real challenge is making sure programs have the systems, support, and time they need to notice, document, and build on the rich learning happening every day.

Below is a simple, actionable guide to help programs elevate play as serious learning.

1. Observe the Learning Beneath the Play

Children’s play reveals their problem-solving skills, creativity, persistence, and social connections. The key is slowing down long enough to see what’s really happening.

Try this:


– Watch for the moment a child revises their block structure after it collapses.
– Notice when two children negotiate who gets the purple dinosaur.
– Pay attention to the storytelling that emerges during pretend play.

These moments are assessment moments.

How Kaymbu helps:
Kaymbu’s photo and video observation make it quick to capture learning as it unfolds, without interrupting the flow of play. Educators can snap a quick photo, write a note, and get right back to supporting the activity!

2. Connect Play to Developmental Skills

Play isn’t random. It ties directly to developmental milestones across all domains: cognitive, physical, language, social-emotional, creative expression, and more.

Try this:


– After observing play, reflect on which skills are being demonstrated.
– Look for growth over time by comparing moments from earlier in the year.
– Share the “why” behind the play with families.

How Kaymbu helps:
With COR Advantage, observations naturally connect to developmental items, making it easier to see patterns, trends, and progress across all domains. Educators can quickly see how play supports the whole child.

3. Create Environments That Inspire Play

Intentional environments help children dive deep into learning. A thoughtfully set-up space invites exploration, independence, and meaningful collaboration.

Try this:


– Rotate materials regularly to spark new ideas.
– Offer open-ended tools—loose parts, blocks, art supplies.
– Set up invitations like: “Can you create a home for these tiny animals?”

How Kaymbu helps:
Use Lesson Planner to outline thoughtful play-based setups, note what worked well, and adjust quickly for the next week. Kaymbu also has 500+ activities built in to help spark ideas!

4. Share the Learning Story With Families

Families often see the joy of play, but not always the deep learning embedded within it. When programs help families understand that play is learning, it builds trust, strengthens relationships, and deepens engagement.

Try this:


– Share photos with captions that explain the skill behind the moment ("Sam practiced counting to 8, 9, 10 and problem-solved while building this tower!").
– Send brief weekly summaries about what the children loved exploring.
–Suggest asking specific questions that pull on specific details like: “When you were at choice time in the pretend play area, what did you dress up as?” Or “What was one thing today that made you feel proud?”  Use

How Kaymbu helps:
Kaymbu’s Storyboards, Daily Sheets, and Messaging tools help educators share meaningful updates instantly, connecting classroom learning to home.

5. Use Play to Guide Instruction

Play tells you what children are curious about, where they need support, and how they prefer to engage.

Try this:


– If children are pretending to cook, add menus or recipe cards to build literacy.
– If children are building ramps, introduce measuring tools to explore math.
– If children are acting out superhero stories, create opportunities to talk about feelings and problem-solving.

How Kaymbu helps:
Observation data in COR Advantage Reports makes it easy to spot interest areas, developmental trends, and group needs .

6. Celebrate Play as the Heart of Learning

Children learn best when they feel safe, connected, and engaged. Play naturally supports all three.

Your role as an educator is not to add more work; it’s to honor the learning already happening and to make it visible.

With simple systems, intentional observations, and tools that fit seamlessly into your day, you can elevate the power of play, all without losing the spontaneity and joy that make early childhood magical.

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