These resources are brought to you by the Cooperative Extension System and your Local Institution

Child Care Home

Have a question? Try asking one of our Experts

Thinking, Learning, and Language Development in Child Care

Last Updated: December 21, 2012

View as web page


Infant girl playing with ball sorter toyAs young children grow, they learn different ways to process information from the world around them, and their thinking skills are very different at different ages. Infants are focused on exploring the world around them. Preschool-age children like to ask questions and test out ideas. School-age children think logically, but still have a hard time understanding abstract concepts such as "freedom."

Child care providers can help young children develop thinking skills by observing carefully, providing interesting materials and problems, asking thoughtful questions and modeling ways of testing out ideas. The following articles provide some basic information about thinking skills in young children.

For specific activity ideas to use in your child care program, check out the database of Hands-on Activities for Child Care, or visit the the database of Story-Stretching Ideas for Child Careto find activities that expand on favorite children's stories.

Browse related Articles by tag: child care, child care stages, child care intellectual


Have a specific question? Try asking one of our Experts

Unlike most other resources on the web, we have experts from Universities around the country ready to answer your questions.