Parents often ask us what a typical day looks like for their preschooler. The short answer: busy, intentional, and full of the kind of learning that looks like play — because it is.
Morning: Arrival and Free Choice
Children arrive between 6:30 and 8:30 and settle in at their choice of learning centers — blocks, art, dramatic play, puzzles, or the writing table. This free-choice time isn’t filler. It builds decision-making skills, social negotiation, and the kind of deep focus that comes from choosing your own work.
Mid-Morning: Circle Time and Small Groups
Morning circle brings everyone together for songs, calendar, weather, and a read-aloud. Then children break into small groups of four or five for focused work in literacy, math, or science. Small groups mean every child gets a turn to talk, ask questions, and be heard.
Midday: Outside, Lunch, and Rest
Outdoor time happens every day, weather permitting. Running, climbing, sandbox play, nature walks — children need to move, and we give them plenty of room to do it. After lunch and cleanup, the room quiets down for rest time. Some children nap; others do quiet table activities.
Afternoon: Projects and Play
Afternoons are for project work — collaborative art, science experiments, building challenges, or dramatic play scenarios. Then it’s back outside for a second round of fresh air before families start arriving for pickup.
Every day ends the same way: your child’s teacher shares a quick summary of the day. What they ate, what they built, who they played with, and what made them laugh.
Want to see it for yourself? Schedule a tour and walk through our preschool room during a real school day.