Jump into the three parts of the guide most families use first.
Month Overview
Your child now knows every letter by name and sound, counts confidently past 20, writes their own name and simple sentences — and, most importantly, thinks of themselves as a learner. This guide closes your Koala Grove year with a portfolio review, a What I Know Book, and a celebration they will never forget. It does not test what the child knows. It reveals how far they have come.
Full alphabet, reading fluency, writing — a celebration review
This is not new content. It is celebration content. Spread the year's work out in front of the child and watch their face — children are the most accurate assessors of their own growth. They know, immediately, how much has changed.
Number sense, all four operations introduced, measurement
A child who can count reliably past 20, add and subtract within 10, and explain their thinking aloud has built the mathematical foundation that will carry them through primary school. This final month confirms they have it.
Reflection, self-advocacy, transitions and big feelings
Closing a year is emotional as well as academic — and both deserve attention. The child who learns to name their growth, feel pride without prompting, and face transitions with curiosity is developing something rarer and more lasting than any academic skill.
You made it through a full year of home education. Whatever it looked like — messy weeks, brilliant days, stretches of doubt, moments of pure joy — the fact that you showed up and kept going is the thing. You did not need to be a teacher. You needed to care enough to stay. You did. It was enough. It was more than enough.
Weekly Plan
Week 1 is the great review — spreading out the year's work, walking the alphabet, counting what the child knows, and seeing growth in their own handwriting. This is not assessment. It is celebration and evidence. What the child notices about their own learning says more than any test.
What You May Need
12 items
Ask the child to choose one piece of work from the year that makes them proud and display it somewhere in the home.
- Sit quietly with the portfolio and choose one item that feels most special. Talk about why.
- Go through alphabet cards and sort them into two piles — instant recognition and still-learning.
- Look at the earliest piece of writing you saved alongside something from this month. Notice one thing that changed.
- 💭 If you could only keep one thing you made this year, what would it be — and why is it the most important?
- 💭 Is there something you investigated this year that you still do not fully understand?
- 💭 How did your hand know how to write that? What changed since the beginning?
- 💭 What do you think your beginning-of-year self would think if they could see you right now?
If your child can move fluently through most of the alphabet, count confidently past 20, and point to visible growth in their writing, they are carrying a strong academic foundation into the next year.
Week 2 is the closing act — making the What I Know Book, writing to the future self, teaching someone else, reading aloud with pride, and celebrating the year with intention. The child ends as the expert, the author, and the performer.
What You May Need
13 items
Hold the read-aloud as a proper event — a special spot, a real audience, genuine applause. Treat the child as the performer they are.
- Re-read one page from the What I Know Book and ask — is there anything else you know that belongs here?
- Choose one favorite book and read or tell one page aloud to whoever is nearby.
- Tell one person one true, interesting fact about something you learned this year.
- 💭 What is something you know so well now that it is hard to remember not knowing it?
- 💭 What is the difference between knowing something and being able to explain it to someone else?
- 💭 What book would you most like to read again in ten years — and why?
- 💭 What do you want to learn first in the year ahead?
If your child talks about learning with pride — names things they discovered, skills they practiced, books they remember — the year has been a success in the way that matters most.
Core Learning Experiences
This month's hands-on activities, grouped by week. Open Instructions to run each one.
Portfolio Review
Before your child arrives, lay the whole year's work across the floor — every drawing, every book, every piece of writing, every science sketch and maths recording, in order from first to last. When they walk in and see it, something happens that no test can replicate — they see themselves as a learner, with a history and evidence of growth they made with their own hands. Then step back and let them lead.
You Will Need
- All work from the year
- Labels (one per month)
- A display surface or clear floor space
Instructions
Set Up
Lay everything out before the child arrives. The display itself should be beautiful and intentional. Let it be a visual celebration before the child even begins.
Choose one piece from each month. Share why you chose it.
✓ Choosing one favorite piece and sharing why is a profound and complete activity.
Compare earliest to most recent: what is different? What has changed in drawings, writing, and thinking?
Write a reflection: 'This year I learned... The thing I am most proud of is... Next year I want to...'
What to Say
- Open Question "Which piece of work are you most proud of? Why that one?"
- Compare "How has your drawing or writing changed since we started? What is different?"
- Wonder "What does looking at all this work together tell you about who you are as a learner?"
What to Observe ↓ Log in Progress Tracker
- Does the child recognize their own growth spontaneously or need it pointed out?
- What does their choice of favorite reveal about what they value?
- Do they approach the review with pride, nostalgia, or something else?
Ideas for next time
Make a 'greatest hits' selection and curate a mini exhibition for a family member.
Write a caption for three favorite pieces: when it was made, what was happening, why it matters.
Share the portfolio with someone who loves the child — let them witness and celebrate the growth.
Photos are a visual portfolio — they make change across time visible and moving.
- "How did you look different at the very start?"
- "What were you doing in this photo? Do you remember how it felt?"
The portfolio proves that growth happens when you stick with something.
- "Remember when this felt really hard?"
- "What helped you get better at it?"
As you move through the portfolio together, invite your child to describe their favorite pieces in your heritage language — the language of pride and memory is often the deepest one.
What I Know Book
Ask your child what they know so well they could teach it to someone else — then write it down, draw it, and fill eight pages with it. The alphabet. The numbers they can count past. The books that mattered. The things they discovered this year. When someone asks what your child learned, hand them this book. It is the most honest answer possible, made entirely by the child themselves.
You Will Need
- 8-page blank book
- Pencils, markers, and crayons
Instructions
Set Up
Plan the book together: one topic per page. Let the child decide what matters most to include.
Draw and label: my letters, my numbers, my favorite books, my favorite experiences this year.
✓ A four-page book with drawings and labels, completed with care, is a real and worthy achievement.
Write one sentence per page. Add a portrait, a number line, and an alphabet strip.
Add a table of contents, a dedication, and an ''About the Author'' page. This is a real book.
What to Say
- Open Question "What is one thing you know so well that you could teach it to someone else?"
- Extend "How would you explain this to someone who has never heard of it before?"
- Compare "What did you know at the beginning that you have now grown completely beyond?"
What to Observe ↓ Log in Progress Tracker
- What does the child choose to include? What do they value?
- How does their writing and drawing compare to the beginning of the year?
- What does this document tell you about their readiness?
Ideas for next time
Turn one chapter into a spoken presentation — teach someone entirely from memory.
Add an index page at the back that lists everything the book covers.
Gift the book to someone who would truly enjoy learning from it.
Adults are a real audience who do not know what the child knows — the teaching is genuine.
- "Did you know that, [grandparent]? [Child] could teach you all about it."
- "What is something you have learned that you could share with someone today?"
New experiences always draw on existing knowledge — making that connection visible builds confidence.
- "What do you already know that might help you with this?"
- "How is this connected to something you learned this year?"
Add a heritage-language caption alongside each English label — the What I Know Book becomes a record of everything your child can name and explain in both languages.
Then and Now Portrait
Ask your child to draw themselves — without showing them the first portrait. Then place both drawings side by side. The growth is immediate and undeniable — in the detail, the proportion, the intention, the quiet confidence of the marks. Two self-portraits, a year apart, tell a story more powerfully than any report card. Display both together.
You Will Need
- Drawing paper
- The First Self-Portrait drawn in Getting Started Week 1 (the baseline you saved a year ago)
- Mirror
Instructions
Set Up
Retrieve the First Self-Portrait you saved at the start of the year (Getting Started, Week 1). Place it where the child can see it. Provide a mirror and art materials. If the original is missing, a clear photograph of it works just as well.
Draw a new self-portrait. Compare it to the first one. What is different?
✓ Drawing the new portrait and placing it next to the first one is itself the whole activity — the comparison is the lesson.
Write or dictate: 'At the start I looked... Now I look...' and 'This year I grew...'
Write a full reflection: physical changes, emotional changes, what was learned, and what comes next.
What to Say
- Compare "When you look at your first portrait next to this one, what has changed?"
- Wonder "What is something about you that has not changed — something you want to always show?"
- Open Question "How would you describe yourself right now in five words?"
What to Observe ↓ Log in Progress Tracker
- Is there a visible difference in drawing sophistication between the two portraits?
- Does the child express pride, surprise, or nostalgia when comparing?
- What do they notice about their own growth — is it physical, emotional, or academic?
Ideas for next time
Do a portrait in a completely different style — abstract, geometric, or painted.
Write a paragraph alongside the portrait: 'This is who I am now.'
Display both portraits side by side — let visitors see the growth.
Self-awareness grows through regular, unhurried, attentive looking.
- "What do you notice about yourself today?"
- "How are you feeling right now? Can you show it in your face?"
Photographs make the journey visible — change becomes something to celebrate, not fear.
- "What was different about you in this photo?"
- "How do you think you will look next year?"
As your child describes what has changed between the two portraits, invite them to use your heritage language — the words for growth, face, and self often carry a different weight.
Letter to Future Self
Your child writes — or dictates — a letter to themselves, to be opened in exactly one year. What are you hoping for? What do you want the future you to remember about right now? Seal it, date the envelope, put it somewhere safe. Next year, before beginning again, you open it together. The child who wrote it is not quite the same child who reads it — and they will feel that difference completely.
You Will Need
- Letter paper and envelope
- Pencil for writing
- A sealed envelope labelled with the opening date
Instructions
Set Up
Discuss: what might change in a year? What might stay the same? What do you wish for yourself?
Dictate a message to future self. Seal it in an envelope with the date and ''Open in one year.''
✓ A dictated message with one drawing, sealed in an envelope, is a complete and meaningful letter.
Write independently: 'Dear future me...' Include 3 things about this year and 1 hope for next year.
Write a full letter with details about the current year. Add a drawing of yourself as you are right now.
What to Say
- Open Question "What do you want the future you to know about who you are right now?"
- Wonder "How do you think you will feel reading this in a year's time?"
- Compare "What is one thing you hope will be the same? What do you hope will be different?"
What to Observe ↓ Log in Progress Tracker
- Can the child imagine themselves in the future?
- What hopes and concerns do they name?
- How does this letter compare to who they were at the beginning of the year?
Ideas for next time
Draw a picture of who you imagine yourself to be in a year — add it inside the letter.
Seal the letter in an envelope marked with the opening date one year from now.
Let the child choose a special hiding place to store the letter until next year.
Bedtime naturally invites reflection — it is the perfect moment to build on it.
- "What happened today that the future you might want to remember?"
- "What are you most proud of from this year?"
Moving into a new chapter is the perfect moment to reflect on identity and growth.
- "Who are you as you step into this new chapter?"
- "What are you bringing with you from everything you have learned?"
If the letter is dictated in your heritage language, seal a translation inside too — future-self will have both, and reading them side by side will be its own discovery.
Year-End Celebration
Your child is the Celebration Host. Invite grandparents, friends, anyone who has watched the year unfold. Set out the portfolio, the books, the art. Your child stands up and presents — their What I Know Book, their favorite pieces, their growth. They answer questions. They receive a certificate. They close the year as its own author and expert. The learning was always real. This moment makes it witnessed, celebrated, and permanent.
You Will Need
- All portfolios and books from the year
- Certificate of completion (hand-drawn or printed)
- Celebration food
- Audience: family, friends, or any caring adult
Instructions
Set Up
Design the celebration with the child. Their input makes it theirs. The child should feel like the architect of their own recognition moment.
Display work and share the What I Know Book with an audience. Receive a certificate.
✓ A shared moment of recognition and joy — however simple — is a complete and worthy celebration.
Give a 'year in review' talk: five things I learned. Read a page from the What I Know Book aloud.
Prepare a full presentation: display, talk, reading, and recommendations for next year.
What to Say
- Open Question "You are the Celebration Host today. What is the single best memory from this whole learning year?"
- Compare "How have you changed as a learner since you started?"
- Wonder "What do you most want to learn or explore in the year ahead?"
What to Observe ↓ Log in Progress Tracker
- Does the child show genuine pride and ownership over their year of learning?
- How do they respond to formal recognition — do they take it in, or deflect it?
- What do they say when asked what they want to do next year?
Ideas for next time
Create a memory scrapbook from the year's highlights — drawings, notes, found objects.
Write three learning goals for next year and seal them with the letter to future self.
Invite a grandparent or special person to the celebration and let the child lead the whole presentation.
Year-end reflection is a conversation that works warmly at any table, any time.
- "What is one thing you learned this year that really surprised you?"
- "What are you most excited to learn next year?"
Every good ending is an invitation to celebrate what was, and prepare for what is next.
- "What are you ready for?"
- "What are you bringing with you?"
If heritage-language family members are part of the celebration, invite your child to share one piece of work and describe it in your heritage language — teaching and celebrating in both languages at once.
Year of Discoveries — Science Review
Pull out the science sketches, observation journals, and collected objects from across the year and lay them out together. For each piece, ask your child to explain what they were investigating. You will be surprised at how much they have remembered — and moved by how carefully they once looked at the world. This is the record of a whole year of scientific curiosity, revisited at its best.
You Will Need
- Science journals, sketches, or observation notes from across the year
- Any collected natural objects (leaves, seed pods, shells) saved from earlier months
- Paper for a summary sketch if desired
Instructions
Set Up
Gather everything science-related from the year beforehand — sketches, photographs, labelled drawings, pressed leaves. Lay them out roughly in order. This becomes the evidence for a year of scientific thinking.
Look through the collected work together. For each piece, ask the child to explain what they were investigating. Celebrate every observation, sketch, and question — this is the record of a scientist's year.
The child sorts the science work into categories they choose — by topic, by season, or by what they found most interesting. They choose one piece to explain in detail and share what they learned from that investigation.
The child reviews the year's science observations and identifies one thing they now understand that they did not understand at the start. They write or dictate one sentence about what changed in their thinking — a scientist's closing observation.
What to Say
- Open Question "Which investigation was your favorite? What made it interesting?"
- Extend "If you were going to teach a friend one science thing you learned this year, what would it be?"
- Wonder "Is there something you observed that you still do not fully understand?"
What to Observe ↓ Log in Progress Tracker
- Does the child recall specific details from earlier activities, or speak in generalities?
- How do they talk about uncertainty — are they comfortable not knowing the answer?
Ideas for next time
As you look through the year's science sketches together, name what was investigated in your heritage language — does the word for 'observe' or 'experiment' feel different in that language?
Alphabet Journey — Our Year of Letters
Spread all 26 alphabet cards on the table. For each one, the child names the letter, gives its sound, and says a word that starts with it — as quickly and fluently as they can. This is a celebration of how far literacy has come, not an assessment. Mark which letters feel fully automatic and which still deserve a little more time. Finish with a letter that the child loves or that has special meaning to them.
You Will Need
- Alphabet cards (all 26 letters)
- Paper and pencil for optional recording
- Optional — stickers or dot stamps to mark confident letters
Instructions
Set Up
Spread all alphabet cards face-up on the table or floor in a loose arrangement — not ABC order. Explain that the child is going to visit every letter and show what they know. This is a celebration tour, not a test.
Go through the cards together — the child names any letter they recognize instantly. For uncertain ones, give the sound as a clue. Count how many were instant at the end and celebrate that number.
The child goes through all 26 cards independently, giving name and sound for each one. Mark confident letters with a sticker. Then go back to any that needed prompting and practice those sounds together.
The child works through all 26 letters naming, sounding, and giving a word for each one. They then arrange the cards into a word using letters from across the set — any word they know. Write it down and keep it as a record of the moment.
What to Say
- Open Question "Which letters feel completely automatic — you know them the moment you see them?"
- Wonder "Do you remember a time when you did not know this letter at all? Can you remember learning it?"
- Extend "Which letter would you most want to keep working on, and why?"
What to Observe ↓ Log in Progress Tracker
- Which letters are fully automatic and which still require a moment of recall?
- Does the child name the letter or the sound first — what is their primary cue?
- How does the child respond to a letter they do not know — do they guess, stay silent, or ask for a clue?
Ideas for next time
As you celebrate each letter, ask whether any of them also appear in words your child knows from your heritage language — connecting the English alphabet to familiar heritage-language words deepens recognition.
Learning-Readiness Number Bond Game
Use counting bears or small objects and a simple calling structure — you call a number, the child builds the matching pair to reach the total, then you swap. This session makes number bonds to 5 and 10 feel like a game rather than a fact-drill, and by the end the child is calling the numbers back at you with confidence. The rhythm makes it stick.
You Will Need
- Counting bears or small objects in two colors (at least 10 of each)
- Number cards 0–10 (optional)
- Paper for recording bonds if desired
Instructions
Set Up
Gather two sets of 10 objects in different colors. Start with bonds to 5 — five objects total, the child arranges them into two groups. Once bonds to 5 feel easy, move to bonds to 10.
Build bonds to 5 together. Say 'I have 3 — how many more do we need to make 5?' The child counts out the rest. Do several rounds with both of you taking turns to call the number. Celebrate every correct bond.
The child works through bonds to 10 independently — you call a number from 0 to 10 and they build the matching pair using the two-color objects. After each bond, they say both numbers aloud — 'Four and six make ten.'
The child recalls bonds to 10 without objects — you call a number and they say the matching number within three seconds. Then reverse — they call, you answer. Record all the bonds on paper and look at the pattern together.
What to Say
- Open Question "If you know that 6 and 4 make 10, what does that tell you about 4 and 6?"
- Compare "How quickly can you say them all now compared to when you first learned them?"
- Extend "Where in real life do you need to know how much more you need to reach a total?"
What to Observe ↓ Log in Progress Tracker
- Are the bonds to 5 now automatic, or does the child still need objects and counting?
- Does the child notice the symmetry of the bonds — that 3+7 and 7+3 give the same total?
- What strategy does the child use when stuck — count all, count on, or recall?
Ideas for next time
Count and name the number bonds in your heritage language alongside English — say the full bond sentence in both languages and notice whether the number words feel different in length or rhythm.
Counting Beyond 20
Gather 25–30 small natural objects — pebbles, shells, seed pods — and count them together in one unhurried session. When the child pushes past 20 and keeps going, something shifts — they notice the pattern on their own, without you pointing it out. This is a session worth doing slowly, so that moment of discovery has room to land.
You Will Need
- 25–30 small natural objects (pebbles, shells, seed pods, or dried beans)
- A number line or number strip to 30
- Paper and pencil
Instructions
Set Up
Collect the objects together beforehand if possible — finding them outside adds meaning. Lay out the number line. Place all objects in a single pile ready to count.
Count the objects together, pointing to each one. Pause at 20 and say — look how far we got! Count on to the end together.
✓ Successfully counting past 20 with one-to-one correspondence — even just to 22 or 23 — is a full and real achievement.
The child counts all objects independently. Then arrange them in groups of 10 and ask — how many groups? How many are left over?
Write numbers 1–30 in sequence. Place one object on each number as you go. Notice the pattern after 20 — what do you see?
What to Say
- Open Question "After we reach 20, what do you notice about the numbers?"
- Wonder "How high do you think numbers go? Is there a biggest number?"
- Extend "What would you count if you wanted to practice getting to 30?"
What to Observe ↓ Log in Progress Tracker
- Does the child maintain one-to-one correspondence past 20?
- Where, if anywhere, does the counting sequence break down or hesitate?
Ideas for next time
Count the objects together in your heritage language alongside English — touching each one as you go. Saying the number sequence past 20 in two languages at once is a real achievement worth celebrating.
Sharing What I Know
The child chooses one topic they know well from the curriculum year — plants, weather, letters, community helpers, story structure, or any area of real passion — and prepares a short teaching session for a real audience. They teach for three to five minutes — what is it? Why does it matter? What is one surprising thing? Watch how differently they hold themselves when someone else is really listening.
You Will Need
- Paper for notes or a simple visual aid
- Any supporting props or materials the child wants to use
- A real audience — a family member, a friend, or a grandparent
Instructions
Set Up
Discuss — you have learned so many things this year. What do you know well enough to teach? Help the child choose something they feel confident and enthusiastic about. Being an expert is a real feeling, and this session honors it.
Plan the teaching session together — what three things will you say? You write the notes while the child dictates. Practice once. Then teach the real audience together.
✓ Standing in front of one person and saying one true, interesting thing about a topic they know is a complete and real act of teaching.
The child plans and prepares their three key points independently. They practice once (to the wall or a toy). Then they teach a real audience without notes.
The child prepares, practices, and delivers a complete three-to-five-minute teaching session to a real audience, answers at least two questions from the audience, and closes with a summary.
What to Say
- Wonder "Teaching someone else something is one of the best ways to find out if you truly understand it. Did you discover anything you were not sure about?"
- Open Question "What part of teaching that topic surprised you — what did you have to think harder about than you expected?"
What to Observe ↓ Log in Progress Tracker
- Does the child explain concepts in their own words or recite memorised phrases?
- Do they respond to audience confusion by trying to explain differently?
- How does the child feel at the end — is there pride, relief, or a desire to do it again?
Ideas for next time
Invite your child to teach what they know in your heritage language — what vocabulary do they reach for when explaining something they truly understand?
Each child teaches the other one thing they learned this year. The listener asks one genuine question.
My Writing Journey
Pull out a piece of writing or name-writing from early in the curriculum year — a traced name, a first drawing with labels, anything with marks the child made. Place it beside a fresh sheet. Write the same thing again today. The comparison does not need commentary — the child will see it immediately in their own hands.
You Will Need
- An early writing sample or drawing with the child's name (saved from Month 1 or early in the year)
- Fresh drawing paper
- Pencil, crayon, or marker
Instructions
Set Up
Find the earliest piece of writing or labelled drawing you saved. Place it where the child can see it easily. Set fresh paper and pencils beside it. Do not comment on the old piece first — let them look.
Write the child's name on fresh paper together, then look at the early sample. Ask what they notice. What is the same? What is different? Add the date to today's sample and keep both.
✓ Writing the name once today and placing it beside the earliest sample is a complete and meaningful activity.
The child writes their name independently, then writes one or two other words they know — a family member's name, a favorite animal, or a word they have learned by heart. Compare spacing, letter size, and formation with the early piece.
The child writes a sentence from memory and compares it to any writing from the start of the year. Together, describe three specific differences — letter size, direction, spacing, or confidence. Add both pieces to the portfolio.
What to Say
- Compare "Look at this — you wrote this at the start of the year. Now look at what you just wrote. What do you notice?"
- Wonder "How did your hand know how to do that? What changed?"
- Open Question "What is one thing about your writing that you want to keep getting better at?"
What to Observe ↓ Log in Progress Tracker
- Is there a visible difference in letter formation, size consistency, or directionality between the two pieces?
- Does the child show pride, surprise, or thoughtful recognition when comparing?
- What specific aspects of their writing does the child notice and name?
Ideas for next time
Write the name in both languages if it is spelled differently — does the handwriting feel different in each script? Compare both to the early sample.
Read-Aloud Celebration
The child selects one or two books they love — familiar favorites, newly mastered readers, or picture books with meaningful memories — and reads or storytells them aloud to a small audience. This is literacy as pleasure, performance, and pride. The audience may be a stuffed animal, a family member, or a sibling; the joy is the same.
You Will Need
- The child's chosen books (1–3 books)
- A comfortable reading spot
- A small audience — stuffed animal, family member, or sibling
Instructions
Set Up
Let the child choose the books. Set up a comfortable reading spot. If the child is not yet reading independently, they can storytell from memory or describe the pictures — all of it counts.
The child holds the book, shows each page, and tells the story in their own words. You sits as audience and listens with full attention. Applaud at the end.
✓ A single page read or storytold aloud with pride is a complete and real read-aloud session.
The child reads or retells the story with growing accuracy — tracking with a finger if helpful, sounding out familiar words, and filling in the rest from memory. Pause to discuss one moment that stands out.
The child reads the book aloud independently with expression and pacing. After finishing, they recommend the book to their audience — 'You should read this because...' — practicing the language of literary opinion.
What to Say
- Open Question "You chose this book. Why did you pick this one?"
- Soothe "I am listening. I am ready. This is your time."
- Compare "What part did you most enjoy reading? What did your voice do differently there?"
What to Observe ↓ Log in Progress Tracker
- Does the child track print from left to right with growing consistency?
- Do they show pleasure in the act of reading aloud, or does it feel effortful?
- What books do they choose — what does this reveal about their interests and growth?
Ideas for next time
If the book exists in your heritage language, read it in both — or let your child name their favorite moment in each language.
Each child chooses one book and reads it to the other. Then swap — be the audience for each other.
Skill Builders
Short, low-prep activities that reinforce what your child is learning this month. Slot them in between core experiences or use them on lighter days.
Week 1 2 activities
Revisit the letters A through M using matching games, quick card checks, and playful repetition.
Show guidance
Count to 20, revisit addition and subtraction within 10, and play a quick problem-solving game using familiar manipulatives.
Show guidance
Week 2 6 activities
Revisit the letters N through Z, celebrating the full alphabet with songs, games, and partner reading.
Show guidance
Review the everyday words covered this year using word cards, building sentences, and reading them in context.
Show guidance
Share a short book or reading strip together — not as a test, but as a celebration of how much the child can now decode and comprehend independently. Let them lead.
Show guidance
Tackle a few familiar problem-solving challenges using strategies developed across the year — a satisfying demonstration of growth.
Show guidance
Create a timeline on the wall with one item or drawing from each month of the year, arranged in order. Let the child place each one.
Show guidance
Present the child with a certificate of completion with real ceremony — they have earned a moment of recognition.
Show guidance
Readiness
This guide is about what the child can do now. Observe and celebrate rather than test.
For full developmental benchmarks by age, see the Child Development & Learning Guide.
- Recognizes name in print and most familiar letters
- Counts to 10–15 reliably
- Names emotions with words rather than just behavior
- Has developed learning routines and some self-regulation
- Recognizes most letters and their sounds; beginning to blend simple words
- Counts to 20 reliably; beginning to understand simple addition
- Expresses emotions with words and is developing strategies to manage them
- Engages with learning routines and can describe what they are learning
- Reads simple sentences with phonetic support
- Counts to 30, adds and subtracts within 10
- Writes their name, common everyday words, and simple sentences
- Talks about learning with pride and specific examples
What To Gather
The most important materials for this guide are what already exists: a year's worth of learning to celebrate.
Monthly Box
Items specific to this month — tick each as you gather it.
Skill Arc Materials
Specific to your skill position this month — gather these for the letter and maths work.
Standard Kit
Reusable items used across multiple months — most families already have these. See the Year-Round Basics list.
Books
Picture books chosen to enrich this month's theme — read one a week, or return to favourites as often as you like.
- Oh, the Places You'll Go! by Dr. Seuss — the classic year-end send-off; celebrating how far you have come and what comes next
- After the Fall (How Humpty Dumpty Got Back Up Again) by Dan Santat — resilience, returning to something you love, and the pride of getting back up
- What Do You Do With an Idea? by Kobi Yamada — how ideas grow when you nurture them — a fitting mirror for a whole year of learning
Set the Stage
Learning Zones
Morning Circle
Use the final weeks' Morning Circle to revisit rituals from the year — the weather chart, the calendar, the gratitude share. Notice what is automatic now.
Reading Nook
Add the child's own books from the year — the All About Me Book, the story books they wrote. They belong in the library. Add books about transitions, starting school, and new beginnings.
Creation Table
Set up the What I Know book work and celebration planning. Let the child help design their own year-end display.
Discovery Station
Create a 'Year Map' or timeline on the wall: one item or drawing from each month, arranged in order. Let the child place each one.
Daily Rhythm
Match the session length to your day — everything else stays the same.
- Morning Circle (revisit year rituals)
- Portfolio or Book Work
- Academic Review Activity
- Read-Aloud (transitions)
- Celebration Preparation
- Closing Ritual Reflect on the session, tidy up, celebrate one win
- Morning Circle Gather, greet the day, and preview what's ahead
- Portfolio Work
- Read-Aloud A picture book connected to the week's theme
These are not learning activities — and that is the point.
- Meals & snacks together
- Outdoor free play
- Rest or nap time
- Screen time (if used)
- Errands, chores, and everyday life
Progress Tracker & Reflection
This tracker is for your own quiet observation — not a report card. Mark what you notice. Three levels are available for each milestone: Exploring (just starting to engage), Growing (doing it with some support), and Flying (doing it confidently and independently). There is no wrong answer. Every child moves at their own pace.
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