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Building Blocks of Play

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About Course

Professional Development Certificate

Early Years

4.5 hours session

CILL Certification

Overview
This workshop series is designed for educators, program leaders and parents who want to deepen their understanding and integrate play-based learning into their practice. Curriculum coordinators and administrators interested in understanding what the practical application of Reggio Emilia and IB Early Years approaches looks like.

 Participants will explore the principles and practices of play-based learning with emphasis on the child as a capable learner, the educator as a guide, and the environment as the “third teacher.” Drawing on the philosophies of Reggio Emilia and the IB Early Years Programme, the series will highlight how play fosters inquiry, creativity, agency, and holistic development.

Practical strategies for designing, documenting, and extending play will be demonstrated, with opportunities for participants to apply them in their own settings. The aim is for educators to leave with a deeper understanding of play as pedagogy, strategies to create inquiry-rich environments, and tools to align play-based learning with curriculum.

Intended Audience
This workshop is designed for Early Years educators, school leaders, and programme coordinators working with children aged 2–8, as well as parents interested in play-based learning. It is well suited for those working in or exploring Reggio Emilia–inspired and IB Early Years aligned settings who want practical strategies for designing play-rich learning environments.

 What Participants Acquire
This workshop series invites educators, leaders, and parents to rethink play not as an add-on to learning, but as a powerful pedagogical foundation. Grounded in early childhood research and inspired by the Reggio Emilia philosophy and the IB Early Years Programme, the series explores how play nurtures thinking, agency, creativity, and deep engagement in young learners.

Across the sessions, participants will examine play as a serious and intentional mode of learning, positioning children as capable thinkers, educators as co-learners, and learning environments as active contributors to meaning making. Through real examples, reflective dialogue, observation tools, and practical design strategies, the workshop bridges theory and practice, supporting participants to notice learning within play, respond thoughtfully to children’s ideas, and create environments that invite inquiry and collaboration.

The series is highly interactive and practice-oriented, encouraging participants to apply ideas directly within their own classrooms, schools, or home settings through guided certificate tasks. By the end of the workshop, participants will have developed a shared language for play-based pedagogy, concrete strategies for extending learning through play, and renewed confidence in designing experiences and spaces that honor children’s curiosity and competence.

Training Structure
Hands-on learning experience:

✓ Exploring play as a pedagogical stance and noticing learning in action

✓ Observing children’s thinking, schemas, and engagement to inform co-learning

✓ Practicing intentional educator moves that extend play without taking control

✓ Analyzing and redesigning learning spaces to foster inquiry, creativity, and collaboration

✓ Reflective documentation, mapping, and sketching to guide lesson and environment design

✓ Practical strategies and tools that can be applied immediately in classrooms, schools, or home settings

Impact and Alignment
Session 1: Play as a Starting Point

 By the end of Session 1, participants will be able to:

  • Articulate play as a pedagogical stance, grounded in early childhood research, neuroscience, and constructivist theory, rather than as a break from “real learning.”
  • Distinguish between types and stages of play (exploratory, symbolic, social, constructive, imaginative) and identify how each supports cognitive, social, emotional, and physical development.
  • Critically examine and challenge personal and institutional misconceptions about play versus academic learning.
  • Identify observable indicators of agency, engagement, and thinking within children’s play. Practice noticing and naming learning within play using simple documentation tools (notes, photos, anecdotal records).
  • Begin shifting from adult-designed outcomes to child-led pathways in everyday classroom experiences.

 

Session 2: Children as Thinkers, Educators as Co-Learners

 By the end of Session 2, participants will be able to:

  • Reframe the educator’s role from director of learning to co-learner and researcher.
  • Identify common play schemas (transporting, enclosing, rotating, connecting, trajectory, etc.) as indicators of children’s thinking.
  • Use responsive language that extends thinking without interrupting or overtaking play.
  • Practice observing with intention such as listening for children’s theories, questions, and problem-solving strategies.
  • Make informed pedagogical decisions about when to step in, step back, or stay with children’s play.
  • Recognize how documentation supports reflection, planning, and professional dialogue rather than compliance.

 

Session 3: Spaces that Spark Learning

 By the end of Session 3, participants will be able to:

  • Explain how physical, emotional, and relational environments shape learning, identity, and belonging.
  • Analyze learning spaces through the lens of the environment as the third teacher.
  • Identify how materials, layout, light, and flow communicate values about children and learning.
  • Recognize barriers within environments that limit agency, inclusion, or collaboration.
  • Design small, intentional spatial shifts that invite inquiry, creativity, and shared problem-solving.

Align environmental design with play-based pedagogy and school philosophy.

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Course Content

Instructors

FM

Flora Mahmood & Maria Khan

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3 Courses

Ms. Flora Mahmood brings over 21 years of leadership and academic excellence across Pakistan’s education sector. An IBEN Evaluation Leader, she is the only Pakistani qualified to evaluate IB schools globally. As Director at the Chughtai Institute of Leadership and Learning, she leads transformative work in learning, leadership, and collaboration. Previously, she served as Superintendent for major school networks, driving large-scale expansion and system-wide academic coherence. Her career includes leading a flagship campus to international accreditation and pioneering career counselling programmes that opened pathways to top global universities.

Ms. Maria Khan brings over 14 years of experience in elevating teaching and learning across diverse school contexts. A seasoned academic leader, she specializes in faculty development, instructional design, and building high-trust, high-performance learning communities. Known for her commitment to continuous improvement and evidence-informed practice, she leads curriculum refinement, teacher mentoring, and academic quality assurance. At Chughtai Institute, she strengthens the institute’s academic vision by designing cohesive learning pathways and supporting educators in implementing effective, impactful instructional practices.

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