Cognitive
4- and 5-year-olds often…
- Learn through the use of expressive imagination (e.g., dress-up), including opportunities to experiment with language and explore materials hands-on like manipulatives, clay, and sand
- Thrive in environments with consistent schedules and clear routines
- Respond to encouragement and build confidence to step out of their comfort zones and try new things
- Are developing their understanding of others’ viewpoints and abstract concepts like “fairness”
- Enjoy being read to and also conducting their own exploration of picture books
Physical
4- and 5-year-olds often…
- Release energy through indoor and outdoor physical activity
- Learn by moving large muscles and through constructive play, like the stacking of large blocks
- Learn through uncoordinated spatial awareness and may experience falls, collisions, and spills
Social-Emotional
4- and 5-year-olds often…
- Look to adults for approval and suggestions, while also occasionally questioning them
- Interpret words literally as they build their understanding of abstract concepts
- Express themselves verbally and artistically and have an active imagination
- Enjoy helping and having jobs and roles in the classroom
Note: The patterns above are research-based and draw on the experience of Bank Street teachers and those that were documented for each age by Chip Wood in Yardsticks (Wood, Chip. Yardsticks: Child and Adolescent Development Ages 4 – 14. Center for Responsive Schools, Inc.; 4th edition, January 2, 2018)