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BRIDGE: Early Years Self-Review Framework

Introduction to Early Years Review

The early years are the foundation of every child’s lifelong learning journey. During this vital stage, children begin developing language, curiosity, social skills, and the habits of learning that shape how they approach school and the world around them. High-quality early education builds not only literacy and numeracy, but also confidence, empathy, and imagination — the roots of all later success.

Drawing on international research, including the Ofsted Early Years Toolkit, and adapted for Bangladeshi schools and pre-primary settings, this section supports calm, non-judgemental reflection on how schools nurture young learners through play, talk, relationships, and the learning environment. It aims to help leaders and teachers ensure every child feels safe, valued, and ready to explore.

The BRIDGE Early Years Framework helps schools review and strengthen provision across six connected clusters:

🧩 Early Literacy & Numeracy Foundations – building children’s early reading, speaking, and number skills through stories, songs, counting, and playful interaction.
🎨 Play-Based & Child-Centred Learning – providing opportunities for learning through discovery, exploration, and imagination.
🗣️ Language Development & Oracy – expanding vocabulary and communication through talk, storytelling, and shared experiences.
💛 Emotional & Social Development – helping children learn cooperation, sharing, and how to recognise and manage feelings.
🏡 Environment & Resources – ensuring classrooms are safe, inclusive, and stimulating with rich opportunities to explore.
👨‍👩‍👧 Parental Engagement in Early Learning – supporting families to encourage early literacy, numeracy, and curiosity at home.

How to Use This Review

Each cluster offers space for calm, evidence-informed reflection rather than judgement. Schools can:

  • Start with the cluster most relevant to current priorities, such as language development or family engagement.

  • Involve teachers, assistants, and parents — early education is a shared responsibility.

  • Combine insights from across clusters to build a coherent plan that strengthens early learning quality and inclusion.

Each cluster includes:

🔎 Evidence Review – explaining what the cluster means and why it matters.
🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables) – essential practices that drive improvement.
🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions – prompts for discussion and reflection.
📊 Exemplar Table – a practical model showing how to record findings and next steps.
📥 Download Template – a Word version to adapt for your school context.

Principles for Meaningful Review

🌱 Nurture before numbers: Children learn best when they feel secure, cared for, and understood.
🎲 Play is powerful: Exploration and curiosity are the engines of early learning.
🗣️ Language unlocks learning: Every conversation, rhyme, and story builds communication and thinking.
🤝 Partnerships matter: Families and schools grow stronger together when early learning continues at home.
🌍 Local strength: Early years practice in Bangladesh can draw deeply on cultural warmth, community bonds, and shared stories.

Together, these clusters help schools ensure every child in Bangladesh begins their learning journey with joy, confidence, and strong foundations for future success.

Cluster 1. Early Literacy & Numeracy Foundations

Building children’s early reading, speaking, and number skills through stories, songs, counting, and playful interaction.

🔎 Evidence Review

What this means (click to expand)

Early literacy and numeracy foundations refer to the basic knowledge, skills, and attitudes that help young children make sense of language, symbols, and numbers. These are not simply about recognising letters or counting objects, but about developing understanding through talk, play, stories, and meaningful experiences.

Literacy in the early years grows from listening, speaking, and enjoying words — through songs, rhymes, and shared reading. Numeracy begins with noticing patterns, comparing quantities, and exploring shapes and measurements in daily life. When children are encouraged to talk, question, and reason, they build the cognitive and emotional tools needed for later academic learning.

কেন এটা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ (click to expand)

Strong early foundations set the trajectory for later achievement. Research consistently shows that early language and number skills predict later literacy, maths attainment, and even life outcomes. Gaps that appear before age seven often persist unless addressed through intentional, play-based learning.

In Bangladesh, BRAC IED (2021) এবং UNICEF (2022) found that many children enter Grade 1 without sufficient oral language or pre-numeracy exposure, especially in rural or low-income areas. Globally, studies from the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF, 2021) এবং OECD (2020) show that high-quality early literacy and numeracy programmes — especially those linking play, talk, and explicit instruction — lead to long-term gains in reading, reasoning, and confidence. The goal is not early formal teaching but rich, meaningful experiences that connect learning with joy.


🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables)

1) Rich Talk and Vocabulary Exposure (click to expand)

What it is: Intentional opportunities for children to hear and use new words through conversation, stories, and play.

What it looks like in schools: Teachers model language naturally, extend children’s phrases (“Yes, that’s a tall tower — even taller than yesterday!”), and use songs, rhymes, and local stories to build vocabulary.

Why it matters (Evidence): Dhaka University IER (2023) and EEF (2021) report that oral language development is the strongest predictor of reading comprehension. BRAC pre-primary pilots showed a 20% improvement in vocabulary where daily storytelling was embedded.

2) Phonological Awareness through Play (click to expand)

What it is: Helping children tune into the sounds of spoken language — rhyme, rhythm, syllables, and first sounds — before moving to letters.

What it looks like in schools: Listening games, clapping syllables, matching rhymes, or sound hunts with everyday objects.

Why it matters (Evidence): International evidence (Snow, 2017; EEF, 2020) links early sound awareness to later reading fluency. A2i-supported early phonological activities in Bangladeshi schools improved decoding confidence in Grade 1.

3) Early Number Sense and Reasoning (click to expand)

What it is: Developing understanding of quantity, order, pattern, and comparison through hands-on exploration.

What it looks like in schools: Sorting shells, comparing lengths, counting fruits, and talking about “more,” “less,” and “equal.” Teachers ask open questions (“How do you know there are more red beads?”).

Why it matters (Evidence): EEF (2021) and UNESCO (2022) show that early numeracy experiences predict later maths success. CAMPE (2022) found Bangladeshi pupils with strong pre-number sense performed higher in Grade 2 arithmetic assessments.

4) Integration of Literacy and Numeracy in Play (click to expand)

What it is: Embedding early learning into meaningful, imaginative contexts rather than isolated drills.

What it looks like in schools: “Shop” role play where children read labels, count money, and write price tags; block building to measure and describe structures.

Why it matters (Evidence): Research by Siraj & Taggart (2014) and BRAC IED (2021) shows that guided play enhances reasoning and collaboration while deepening conceptual understanding.

5) Daily Storytime and Shared Reading (click to expand)

What it is: Consistent, interactive reading sessions that build listening, imagination, and comprehension.

What it looks like in schools: Adults read aloud expressively, pause for predictions, invite retelling, and connect stories to children’s lives.

Why it matters (Evidence): OECD (2020) reports that shared reading accelerates language growth. Bangladeshi NGOs introducing bilingual story corners saw greater engagement among early readers and multilingual learners.

6) Observation and Early Support (click to expand)

What it is: Regular observation of children’s talk, play, and interactions to identify who may need extra help.

What it looks like in schools: Practitioners use simple checklists or anecdotal records, share notes with parents, and adapt plans accordingly.

Why it matters (Evidence): WHO/UNICEF (2023) stress early identification of developmental and language delays as key to equity. Continuous observation allows timely support before gaps widen.


🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions

  • How consistently do we create rich language and talk environments across all early years classes?
  • Are children engaging daily in playful activities that link language, stories, and early maths?
  • How well do we observe and respond to each child’s progress in literacy and numeracy?
  • Do our storybooks, songs, and materials reflect both Bangladeshi culture and children’s diverse home languages?
  • How do we support parents to extend early reading and counting at home?

📊 Exemplar Table — Shapla Pre-Primary School

Evaluation Question Evidence we looked at Reflection / Next Steps
Rich Talk Environment Lesson observation notes show frequent instructions but limited open-ended questioning. Provide CPD on extending children’s talk; introduce “Talk Boost” small-group activities.
Early Number Sense Counting routines occur in circle time; few maths-linked play areas. Add number-rich corners (shop, kitchen, construction); use visual number lines and counting songs.
Storytime & Reading Daily storytime observed, but limited Bangla storybooks. Build bilingual story baskets with local folk tales; invite parents for storytelling sessions.
Observation & Support Individual progress notes kept informally. Introduce simple tracking grids for language and number milestones; review fortnightly in team meetings.
Home–School Links Parents attend meetings but request more ideas for home learning. Create take-home “play packs” with counting games and story cards; pilot parent literacy workshops.

📥 Download Word Template — Early Literacy & Numeracy Foundations

Cluster 2. Play-Based & Child-Centred Learning

Providing opportunities for learning through discovery, exploration, and imagination.

🔎 Evidence Review

What this means (click to expand)

Play-based and child-centred learning means structuring the environment, time, and adult interactions so children learn by exploring ideas that matter to them. It blends free exploration with purposeful adult guidance, ensuring that play connects to key early learning goals (language, number, self-regulation, collaboration).

Children investigate, imagine, negotiate roles, and solve problems using open-ended materials. Adults observe, join sensitively, and extend thinking with rich talk and prompts. This approach respects children’s agency and builds deep understanding, not just surface skills.

কেন এটা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ (click to expand)

High-quality guided play strengthens language, reasoning, self-control, and motivation — foundations for later literacy and mathematics. International studies (e.g., EEF early years guidance; OECD early childhood reviews) show that when adults scaffold play with intentional questions and feedback, children make faster gains than with rote activities alone.

In Bangladesh, where class sizes and resources vary, child-centred approaches can be low-cost and powerful: re-purposing local materials, organising flexible learning areas, and using bilingual stories help children connect school learning with home culture and experiences.


🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables)

1) Guided Play & Sensitive Scaffolding (click to expand)

What it is: Adults observe children’s play, join briefly, and extend learning with prompts, vocabulary, and challenges.

What it looks like in schools: “I wonder what will happen if we add one more block?” “How could we make a taller bridge?” Adults model language, thinking aloud, then step back.

Why it matters (Evidence): Guided play outperforms free play alone for targeted learning goals, improving language, reasoning, and persistence.

2) Continuous Provision with Clear Intent (click to expand)

What it is: Well-organised areas (e.g., construction, small world, mark-making, role play, maths) open daily, each linked to specific learning outcomes.

What it looks like in schools: Labels and picture cues in Bangla/English, rotating challenges (“Can you write a shopping list?”), and visible success criteria for adults.

Why it matters (Evidence): Children revisit concepts often, enabling spaced practice and growing independence; staff can differentiate support efficiently.

3) Observe → Plan → Do → Review Cycle (click to expand)

What it is: A simple formative loop where staff notice interests/needs, plan enhancements, facilitate play, and review evidence of learning.

What it looks like in schools: Short observation notes, weekly enhancement plans, child voice in “review circles,” and photos/work samples to document progress.

Why it matters (Evidence): Tightens the link between play opportunities and curriculum goals; ensures timely support for children at risk of falling behind.

4) Open-Ended Materials & Loose Parts (click to expand)

What it is: Everyday objects (pebbles, bottle caps, fabrics, boxes) that invite creativity, counting, sorting, building, and storytelling.

What it looks like in schools: Clearly organised baskets/trays; children choose and combine materials; adults prompt mathematical and language talk.

Why it matters (Evidence): Encourages problem-solving and rich vocabulary while being low-cost and culturally adaptable.

5) Outdoor Learning Every Day (click to expand)

What it is: Purposeful activities outside that develop gross motor skills, science inquiry, and collaborative play.

What it looks like in schools: Water/sand play, nature hunts, measuring shadows, obstacle courses; clear routines for safety and inclusion.

Why it matters (Evidence): Outdoor contexts boost language, executive function, and well-being; they widen access for energetic learners.

6) Inclusion & Multilingual Access in Play (click to expand)

What it is: Ensuring children with SEND and multilingual learners participate fully with adapted materials, visuals, and routines.

What it looks like in schools: Picture schedules, dual-language story props, sensory-friendly corners, peers as helpers, and short, predictable instructions.

Why it matters (Evidence): Reduces barriers, increases engagement, and supports equity from the start of schooling.


🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions

  • Is guided play (with clear learning intent) happening daily across all areas, not just free play?
  • Do our continuous provision areas clearly signal the vocabulary, concepts, and skills we are targeting?
  • How consistently do we use the Observe → Plan → Do → Review cycle to adapt provision for different learners?
  • Are open-ended, low-cost materials available and well organised so children can choose and combine them independently?
  • How do we ensure outdoor learning is purposeful, safe, and inclusive every day — even in limited space?
  • Do multilingual learners and children with SEND have equitable access to play, with visuals, routines, and adapted tasks?

📊 Exemplar Table — Padma Early Learning Centre

Evaluation Question Evidence we looked at Reflection / Next Steps
Guided Play Observations show adults supervising but rarely extending play with questions. CPD on prompt stems (“What do you notice…?” “How could we…?”); plan short adult-led “nudges.”
Continuous Provision Areas open daily; intent/vocabulary not visible to staff or parents. Add area cards with learning goals and key words (Bangla/English); rotate weekly challenges.
OPDR Cycle Informal notes; little evidence of review or adaptation. Introduce simple Observe → Plan → Do → Review template; review progress fortnightly.
Loose Parts Some recycled items present; storage mixed; children ask before using. Organise labelled baskets; establish “choose–use–return” routine; model maths/language talk.
Outdoor Learning Outdoor time daily but mainly free running; few purposeful tasks. Set up stations (water measure, nature tray, obstacles); add risk-benefit checklists.
Inclusion & Multilingual Access Dual-language resources limited; SEND supports ad hoc. Create visual schedules, bilingual story props; designate a sensory-calm corner; peer buddies.

📥 Download Word Template — Play-Based & Child-Centred Learning

Cluster 3. Language Development & Oracy

Expanding vocabulary and communication through talk, storytelling, and shared experiences.

🔎 Evidence Review

What this means (click to expand)

Language development and oracy are about helping young children become confident listeners, talkers, and collaborators. This includes vocabulary growth, sentence building, active listening, turn-taking, and the ability to explain ideas, ask questions, and retell experiences.

Children develop language best when adults create rich opportunities for purposeful talk: stories and poems, songs and games, role play, small-group dialogue, and everyday conversations that connect school to home and community life.

কেন এটা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ (click to expand)

Early oral language strongly predicts later reading comprehension, writing quality, and wider attainment. Intentional oracy routines also strengthen confidence, self-regulation, and inclusion.

In Bangladesh, many children learn across Bangla and English (and sometimes a home language). Schools that value multilingual talk, use bilingual stories, and explicitly teach vocabulary help close early gaps and support equitable access to the curriculum.


🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables)

1) Dialogic Teaching & Rich Talk (click to expand)

What it is: Purposeful back-and-forth talk where adults and children co-construct ideas.

What it looks like in schools: Open questions, wait time, building on children’s ideas, modelling full sentences, and encouraging reasons (“because…”, “so that…”).

Why it matters (Evidence): Dialogic approaches deepen understanding and vocabulary, and support later reading comprehension.

2) Systematic Vocabulary Instruction (Tier 2/3) (click to expand)

What it is: Selecting useful words (e.g., “predict”, “compare”, “fragile”) and domain terms, then revisiting them in stories, play, and displays.

What it looks like in schools: Brief word-introductions before read-alouds, picture cues, actions/gestures, word walls in Bangla/English, and retrieval through games.

Why it matters (Evidence): Explicit vocabulary teaching accelerates comprehension and expression for all learners, especially those with limited language exposure.

3) Daily Storytelling, Poetry & Songs (click to expand)

What it is: Interactive read-alouds, oral storytelling traditions, chants, and nursery rhymes.

What it looks like in schools: Predict, retell, role-play scenes, use story maps; include local folk tales and children’s lived experiences.

Why it matters (Evidence): Regular narrative experiences grow vocabulary, grammar, memory, and cultural identity.

4) Structured Oracy Routines & Talk Rules (click to expand)

What it is: Simple, repeated structures for discussion (Think–Pair–Share, talk partners, circle time), underpinned by agreed “talk rules”.

What it looks like in schools: Visual prompts for turn-taking, sentence stems (“I noticed…”, “I agree because…”), and mixed-ability pairings.

Why it matters (Evidence): Predictable routines increase participation, especially for quieter children and multilingual learners.

5) Multilingual Bridging & Visual Supports (click to expand)

What it is: Valuing home language(s) alongside Bangla and English; using visuals, gestures, and objects to make meaning clear.

What it looks like in schools: Dual-language labels, picture schedules, bilingual story baskets, pupils encouraged to explain ideas first in their strongest language.

Why it matters (Evidence): Home-language use supports concept development and accelerates additional language learning; visuals reduce cognitive load.

6) Observation & Early Support for SLCN (click to expand)

What it is: Regularly noticing children’s speech, language, and communication; adapting provision and seeking specialist advice when needed.

What it looks like in schools: Simple checklists for listening/attention, understanding, expression; small-group language games; parent guidance for home talk.

Why it matters (Evidence): Early, light-touch intervention prevents widening gaps and supports inclusion.


🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions

  • Do adults consistently model rich talk, full sentences, and varied vocabulary across the day?
  • Are we explicitly teaching and revisiting key Tier 2/3 words connected to stories and topics?
  • How often do children retell, perform, and innovate on stories, poems, and rhymes?
  • Do we use predictable oracy routines so every child can participate — including quieter and multilingual learners?
  • How are we valuing home languages and using visuals to support understanding and expression?
  • What systems help us notice, record, and respond early to speech, language, and communication needs?

📊 Exemplar Table — Jamuna Kindergarten

Evaluation Question Evidence we looked at Reflection / Next Steps
Dialogic Teaching Observations show frequent closed questions; minimal wait time. CPD on open prompts and wait time; display sentence stems at carpet area.
Vocabulary Instruction Some word walls; limited review of new words after read-alouds. Add “three words a week” routine; retrieval through actions/games; bilingual word cards.
Storytelling & Poetry Daily stories; poetry/rhyme used occasionally. Introduce weekly poem/rhyme; use story maps and role-play to support retelling.
Oracy Routines Circle time regular; talk partners inconsistent. Embed Think–Pair–Share twice daily; teach and post simple “talk rules”.
Multilingual Access Limited dual-language resources; little home-language bridging. Create bilingual story baskets; invite parent storytellers; use dual-language labels.
Observation & Support Notes kept informally; no short screening tool. Adopt simple SLCN checklist; set up small-group language games; share home-talk tips.

📥 Download Word Template — Language Development & Oracy

Cluster 4. Emotional & Social Development

Helping children learn cooperation, sharing, and how to recognise and manage feelings.

🔎 Evidence Review

What this means (click to expand)

Emotional and social development in the early years is about how children understand feelings, build relationships, and participate in group life. It includes recognising emotions, self-regulation, empathy, cooperation, sharing, turn-taking, and problem-solving with others.

Children learn these skills through warm relationships with adults, predictable routines, and playful experiences that let them practise negotiation, kindness, and responsibility.

কেন এটা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ (click to expand)

Secure emotional development underpins attention, memory, and resilience — prerequisites for literacy, numeracy, and wider learning. Classrooms with clear routines and caring interactions see better engagement and fewer behaviour issues.

In Bangladesh, schools can draw on strong community values, storytelling traditions, and peer support to cultivate empathy and belonging, even where class sizes are large and resources limited.


🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables)

1) Warm Relationships & Consistent Routines (click to expand)

What it is: Predictable care and respectful interactions that help children feel safe and ready to learn.

What it looks like in schools: Calm greetings, visual day schedules, clear transitions, and consistent expectations across staff.

Why it matters (Evidence): Emotional safety reduces cognitive load and supports self-regulation; routines increase independence and on-task behaviour.

2) Emotion Coaching & Vocabulary for Feelings (click to expand)

What it is: Adults noticing emotions, naming them, and guiding children toward regulation strategies.

What it looks like in schools: “I can see you’re frustrated — let’s try belly breathing, then we can rebuild the tower together.” Feelings charts in Bangla/English, calm corners, and simple self-talk prompts.

Why it matters (Evidence): Labelling emotions and teaching strategies builds self-control and reduces conflict; language gives children tools to manage behaviour.

3) Cooperative Play & Social Problem-Solving (click to expand)

What it is: Structured opportunities to practise sharing, turn-taking, and resolving disagreements.

What it looks like in schools: Partner tasks, team jobs, role-play with social scripts, and adult-mediated “What could we try?” conversations.

Why it matters (Evidence): Guided collaboration grows empathy, language for negotiation, and prosocial habits that transfer beyond the classroom.

4) Inclusive Participation & Belonging Routines (click to expand)

What it is: Ensuring every child — including multilingual learners and those with SEND — is included, noticed, and able to contribute.

What it looks like in schools: Buddy systems, visual cues, adapted roles, and celebrating effort; stories and songs reflecting local culture and languages.

Why it matters (Evidence): Belonging predicts engagement and attendance; inclusive routines reduce barriers and support equity.

5) Family Partnerships for Social–Emotional Learning (SEL) (click to expand)

What it is: Simple, shared approaches between home and school for feelings, routines, and kindness.

What it looks like in schools: Parent workshops on calming games, home–school notes about friendship goals, take-home story cards on emotions.

Why it matters (Evidence): Consistency across settings strengthens skills and prevents mixed messages for children.

6) Observation & Early Support for Behaviour/SEMH Needs (click to expand)

What it is: Regular check-ins and simple tracking to spot patterns in behaviour and emotions early.

What it looks like in schools: ABC (Antecedent–Behaviour–Consequence) notes, brief team reviews, targeted small-group SEL games, and clear referral pathways where needed.

Why it matters (Evidence): Early, light-touch interventions reduce escalation and support inclusion without stigma.


🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions

  • Do daily routines and adult interactions communicate warmth, respect, and consistency?
  • How explicitly do we teach and model vocabulary for feelings and strategies for calming?
  • Where and how often do children practise cooperation, sharing, and problem-solving?
  • Which routines ensure that multilingual learners and children with SEND feel included and valued?
  • How are we partnering with families to reinforce social–emotional skills at home?
  • What systems help us notice, record, and respond early to emerging behaviour or SEMH needs?

📊 Exemplar Table — Surma Early Childhood Centre

Evaluation Question Evidence we looked at Reflection / Next Steps
Relationships & Routines Calm greetings observed; transitions noisy; expectations vary by adult. Agree shared transition routines; display visual schedule; practise with children.
Emotion Coaching Feelings posters present; few examples of adults naming emotions in the moment. CPD on emotion language; introduce calm-corner routine and self-talk cards.
Cooperative Play Role-play area popular; conflicts end with “stop” only, little problem-solving. Teach “What could we try?” script; assign rotating helper roles; model sharing language.
Inclusion & Belonging Buddy system informal; limited dual-language materials. Formalise buddies; add bilingual songs/stories; celebrate effort in assemblies.
Family Partnerships Parent meetings termly; SEL at home not addressed. Send weekly “kindness game” cards; host short parent demo on calming strategies.
Observation & Early Support Behaviour notes inconsistent; triggers unclear. Introduce simple ABC tracker; fortnightly review; small-group SEL sessions.

📥 Download Word Template — Emotional & Social Development

Cluster 5. Environment & Resources

Ensuring classrooms are safe, inclusive, and stimulating with rich opportunities to explore.

🔎 Evidence Review

What this means (click to expand)

The early years environment is often described as the “third teacher” — shaping how children feel, move, explore, and learn. It includes the physical space, layout, materials, displays, and emotional climate. A well-planned environment encourages independence, creativity, and collaboration.

Across Bangladesh, early years teachers show remarkable creativity with what is locally available — arranging spaces for movement, adapting furniture for child access, and turning everyday objects into learning tools. The emphasis is on thoughtful design and purposeful use: ensuring every area, material, and routine helps children to explore, talk, and make meaning. With imagination and care, modest settings can become rich places for discovery.

কেন এটা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ (click to expand)

Children’s engagement and well-being rise when classrooms feel safe, organised, and inviting. Clear learning zones, accessible materials, and predictable routines help children make independent choices and stay focused. When teachers plan the environment around children’s needs — using teacher-made, recycled, or locally sourced materials — the space communicates care, equity, and curiosity without requiring expensive equipment.


🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables)

1) Safety, Cleanliness & Accessibility (click to expand)

What it is: A safe, clean, and organised classroom that meets children’s basic physical needs and allows independent access to materials.

What it looks like in schools: Clear walkways; stable, safe furniture; drinking water; hand-washing; shelves at child height; ventilation/natural light where possible; simple safety checks each week.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Safety and comfort are preconditions for concentration and confidence; consistent routines reduce accidents and anxiety.

2) Defined Learning Zones & Flow of Movement (click to expand)

What it is: Organising the room into clear zones (e.g., books/story, construction, mark-making, role play, maths, quiet reflection) with a smooth flow between them.

What it looks like in schools: Mats or low shelves to signal areas; picture labels (Bangla/English); simple rotation routines so each group visits a variety of experiences even in small rooms.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Children make independent choices, stay engaged longer, and understand expectations — helpful in large classes.

3) Locally Sourced, Teacher-Made Resources (click to expand)

What it is: Using everyday and recycled items to spark curiosity, counting, sorting, building, storytelling, and pretend play.

What it looks like in schools: Bottle caps for maths, cardboard for construction, fabrics for role play, sticks/leaves/stones for patterns; children help collect, clean, and sort items.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Low-cost materials are versatile, sustainable, and culturally familiar; they invite creativity and problem-solving.

4) Culturally Relevant & Inclusive Displays (click to expand)

What it is: Visuals and artifacts that reflect children’s languages, families, festivals, and local environment.

What it looks like in schools: Bilingual labels; children’s work at eye level; photos of community helpers; story posters in familiar settings; positive behaviour charts with simple icons.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Representation builds belonging and comprehension; linking learning to lived experience increases engagement.

5) Outdoor & Shared Spaces as Learning Areas (click to expand)

What it is: Making purposeful use of courtyards, verandas, corridors, or shaded areas for play and exploration.

What it looks like in schools: Counting paths, nature trays, sand/water tubs, chalk mark-making zones, quiet reading mats; simple risk-benefit routines for safety.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Outdoor contexts boost physical health, language, and collaboration — possible with minimal equipment.

6) Maintenance, Rotation & Child Responsibility (click to expand)

What it is: Keeping materials in good condition, refreshing choices, and teaching children to care for the environment.

What it looks like in schools: Weekly tidy/repair checks; rotating baskets (e.g., new loose parts or story props); “choose–use–return” routines; simple helper roles.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Rotation sustains curiosity; shared responsibility builds independence, respect, and community pride.


🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions

  • How safe, clean, and accessible is our classroom for small hands and independent movement?
  • Do clear zones and simple routines help children choose activities and stay engaged, even with large classes?
  • Which locally available or teacher-made resources are we using well — and what low-effort additions could enrich talk, maths, or storytelling?
  • Do displays reflect children’s languages, families, and community so that every child feels seen?
  • How are we using outdoor or shared spaces purposefully each day, even when space is limited?
  • What simple system helps us maintain, rotate, and involve children in caring for materials?

📊 Exemplar Table — Karnafuli Pre-Primary

Evaluation Question Evidence we looked at Reflection / Next Steps
Safety & Accessibility Walkways blocked by bags; shelves above child height. Introduce bag hooks; rearrange low shelves; add weekly safety checklist.
Learning Zones Areas defined but flow crowded during transitions. Create one-way movement path; stagger transitions; use floor markers.
Locally Sourced Resources Some recycled items; storage mixed; children need permission to use. Label baskets; teach “choose–use–return”; add bottle-cap maths and fabric role-play kits.
Cultural & Inclusive Displays Alphabet posters only; limited children’s work on walls. Add bilingual labels; display children’s drawings/photos at eye level; rotate work weekly.
Outdoor / Shared Spaces Veranda used for lining up only. Set up chalk mark-making, counting path, and quiet reading mat; simple safety routine.
Maintenance & Rotation Same baskets out daily; some broken items. Weekly repair check; rotate loose parts; introduce classroom helper roles.

📥 Download Word Template — Environment & Resources

Cluster 6. Parental Engagement in Early Learning

Supporting families to encourage early literacy, numeracy, and curiosity at home.

🔎 Evidence Review

What this means (click to expand)

Parental engagement in early learning means building positive two-way communication between school and home and sharing small, practical ways families can support children’s language, play, and curiosity. It does না expect parents to “teach lessons” at home; instead, it values everyday interactions — talk, stories, counting, songs, and encouragement.

In Bangladesh, close-knit families and community ties are a major strength. Parents, grandparents, siblings, and caregivers often share responsibilities. Schools can honour this by offering flexible, respectful communication and ideas that fit different routines, languages, and levels of confidence with printed materials.

কেন এটা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ (click to expand)

When families understand classroom learning, they can connect it to daily life — asking about a story, noticing letters on a sign, or practising counting while shopping. This boosts motivation, vocabulary, and attendance.

Studies in Bangladesh highlight that brief teacher–parent contact, community reading corners, or simple home-learning cards can improve engagement and early language. International evidence shows that partnerships focused on encouragement and shared understanding — rather than pressure — make the greatest difference for young children.


🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables)

1) Respectful Two-Way Communication (click to expand)

What it is: Trusting, non-judgemental dialogue with families.

What it looks like in schools: Warm greetings; short updates in Bangla; open-door times; SMS/WhatsApp or parent notebooks for quick messages and questions.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Positive relationships increase attendance and parental confidence; families engage more when communication is clear, friendly, and culturally attuned.

2) Sharing Simple Learning Ideas for Home (click to expand)

What it is: Easy, everyday suggestions that fit family routines.

What it looks like in schools: “Story of the Week” picture cards; short rhymes and counting songs; games with household items; quick demonstrations at pick-up.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Short, consistent home activities centred on talk and play have measurable impact, especially when modelled and revisited.

3) Involving Families in the Learning Journey (click to expand)

What it is: Inviting parents to see, share, and celebrate progress.

What it looks like in schools: Children’s work displayed with family photos; open mornings; parent storytelling in Bangla or local dialect; simple portfolios to take home.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Builds pride, motivation, and belonging — especially when home languages and traditions are recognised.

4) Empowering Parents with Confidence, Not Pressure (click to expand)

What it is: Reassuring families that small moments of interaction matter more than formal teaching.

What it looks like in schools: Plain-language explanations of learning goals; emphasising listening, questions, and encouragement; replacing “homework” with optional play ideas.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Relational support sustains engagement over time; parents participate more when tasks feel doable and affirming.

5) Using Community Strengths and Networks (click to expand)

What it is: Leveraging extended family, neighbours, youth, and local groups.

What it looks like in schools: Reading clubs; grandparents’ storytelling; peer parent champions; community library/toy-lending corners.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Extends learning beyond school hours and reaches families who might otherwise feel disconnected.

6) Observation, Sensitivity & Inclusion (click to expand)

What it is: Understanding each family’s circumstances and avoiding one-size-fits-all expectations.

What it looks like in schools: Quiet check-ins; flexible meeting times; inclusive language for all caregivers; outreach for irregular attendance.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Equity-focused engagement ensures every child benefits from a consistent circle of care between home and school.


🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions

  • Do families feel welcomed, respected, and listened to by all staff?
  • How often do we share short, practical examples of learning at home — in Bangla or local languages?
  • Are we celebrating family strengths and cultural traditions rather than focusing only on problems?
  • What systems help us communicate with parents who have limited time or literacy (e.g., voice notes, visuals)?
  • How do we ensure both mothers and fathers — and other caregivers — are included in communication and activities?
  • Which community partnerships (NGOs, mosques, youth groups, libraries) could extend early learning beyond school?

📊 Exemplar Table — Shantiniketan Pre-Primary School

Evaluation Question Evidence we looked at Reflection / Next Steps
Communication Notice board updates weekly; no two-way feedback channel. Start WhatsApp group or message books; share voice notes in Bangla for accessibility.
Learning at Home Homework sheets focus on writing practice. Replace with rhyme cards and talk-based challenges; share one new idea weekly.
Family Involvement Low attendance at meetings due to work hours. Offer short open mornings; one Saturday family event per term; provide summaries via voice note.
Confidence, Not Pressure Parents worry about teaching English at home. Reassure that Bangla stories build language; share simple phrases; celebrate efforts.
Community Networks Nearby NGO library underused by families. Partner for mobile book lending and joint storytelling sessions.
Inclusion Fathers rarely attend; single guardians not listed. Invite fathers to “skills day”; update contact lists to include all caregivers.

📥 Download Word Template — Parental Engagement in Early Learning

Conclusion – From Reflection to Action

দ্য BRIDGE Early Years framework supports leaders and teachers to strengthen the foundations of learning across six connected clusters: Early Literacy & Numeracy, Play-Based & Child-Centred Learning, Language Development & Oracy, Emotional & Social Development, Environment & Resources, এবং Parental Engagement. Each cluster offers a calm, practical lens to notice what works, where barriers remain, and which small steps will help young children explore, talk, count, and thrive.

Every setting is different. Use these clusters flexibly and build on local strengths — family and community ties, bilingual stories, teacher-made resources, and children’s curiosity. What matters is that reflection stays collaborative, non-judgemental, and evidence-informed, grounded in brief observations, children’s voices, simple participation data, and regular conversations with caregivers.

🧭 Guiding prompts for your team

  • Which children or groups are not yet benefiting fully from our early years offer (language, play, inclusion), and what evidence shows this?
  • What can we improve this month with low effort (talk routines, story baskets, number trails, zone labels), and what needs longer-term planning (outdoor shade, shelving, CPD, partnerships)?
  • How will we make learning visible to families — quick updates in Bangla, voice notes, open mornings, take-home play ideas — without adding pressure?
  • What simple evidence will we collect to know change is helping — short observation notes, photos of play, child quotes, attendance/engagement checks?
  • How are we ensuring equitable access for multilingual learners and children with SEND (visuals, predictable routines, adapted roles, calm spaces)?
  • What will we start, stop, and continue over the next six weeks? Who is responsible, and when will we review progress with staff and families?

Explore the six clusters, gather your evidence, and agree two or three clear next actions. Step by step, each improvement moves your setting — and every child — closer to a safe, joyful, language-rich start to learning that reflects the strengths of Bangladesh’s families and communities.