Early Years Learning Framework

Most parents drop their kids off at childcare and trust that something good is happening inside. But if you have ever wanted to understand what that actually looks like, it starts with the framework behind the programs.

At Broadmeadows Early Learning Centre, early childcare education is built on a solid foundation. The centre follows the approved Early Years Learning Framework used across Australia, alongside the Victorian Early Years Learning and Development Framework. These are not documents that sit in a filing cabinet. They shape how educators plan each day, respond to individual children, and track development over time.

Every child is different. Some are ready to sit and focus; others learn best when they are moving, building, or playing alongside someone else. The frameworks are designed with that in mind, guiding educators to tailor programs to each child's developmental stage, interests, and strengths rather than running everyone through the same experience.

The result is early childcare education that supports emotional, social, and cognitive growth in a way that genuinely makes sense for young children. Parents who take the time to understand what goes into the programs here tend to feel a lot more confident about their choice.

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Early Childcare Education Guided by the Early Years Learning Framework

Something a lot of parents do not realise is that under Australian National Law and Regulations, every early learning service is legally required to base its programs on an approved learning framework. It is not just best practice; it is a requirement across the board.

Broadmeadows Early Learning Centre follows the Victorian Early Years Learning and Development Framework, which gives the centre's early childcare education a clear and structured foundation. The framework recognises that children do not all develop the same way or at the same pace, and good educators need to be responsive to that rather than rigid about it.

In practice, that means programs are designed around each child's individual needs, interests, and experiences. Early childcare education here is not just about sitting kids down and working through a set of activities. It is a genuine mix of structured learning and play based experiences, because that combination is what actually works at this age.

Have a look at the Programs / Services page to see how this comes together day to day.

Broadmeadows Early Learning Center
Broadmeadows Early Learning Center

Quality Early Childhood Education Supported by the National Quality Standard

Alongside the Victorian Early Years Learning and Development Framework, there is another layer of accountability worth knowing about: the National Quality Standard, or NQS. This sits within the broader National Quality Framework in Australia and sets the benchmarks that every early childhood education and care service is measured against.

The NQS covers seven quality areas:

The NQS contains 18 standards with two or three standards in each quality area. These standards are high-level outcome statements. Under each standard sit elements that describe the outcomes that contribute to the standard being achieved. There are 58 elements in total.

Every centre gets assessed and rated against these areas. Quality ratings of assessed services are published on the national registers and on the Starting Blocks website. It is essentially a way of making sure services are held accountable across the things that genuinely matter to parents: how safe the environment is, how qualified the educators are, how well the centre works with families, and how the place is managed overall.

For parents who are visiting centres and weighing up their options, the NQS is a useful framework to keep in mind. A centre that takes these standards seriously will be happy to talk through them with you.

Understanding the Early Years Learning Framework Principles and Practices

The early years learning framework principles and practices are built around three core ideas. Once you understand them, a lot of what happens in a good early learning room starts to make sense.

Belonging

Kids do not develop in isolation. They need to feel connected to the people around them: their family, their educators, the other children in the room. When a child feels like they genuinely belong somewhere, they are more confident, more willing to give things a go, and more open to learning. It really does start here.

Being

Children are not just little adults in training. They have their own lives happening right now, and that matters. Being is about valuing the present moment rather than always rushing toward the next one; supporting children's curiosity, play, and sense of discovery as it happens, not just in preparation for what comes next.

Becoming

The early years move fast. Children are picking up new skills, forming new relationships, and working out who they are at a pace that is unlike any other time in their lives. Becoming is about paying attention to that journey and making sure the learning environment grows with each child rather than holding them back.

These three ideas shape everything at Broadmeadows ELC, from how the rooms are set up to how educators talk with children and plan their days.

What makes the framework practical is what sits underneath those concepts: a clear set of principles and practices that guide how educators show up for children and families every day.

Principles:

Secure, respectful, and reciprocal relationships: This one is pretty fundamental. When children feel safe and respected, everything else falls into place. Strong relationships with both children and families are what good early learning is built on.
Partnerships with families: Parents are not just drop-off and pick-up contacts. They are a genuine part of their child's learning, and the more involved they are, the better things tend to go.
High expectations and equity: Every child is capable of more than people sometimes give them credit for. The framework holds high expectations for all children, regardless of where they come from or what their starting point looks like.
Respect for diversity: Children come from all kinds of backgrounds, and that is a good thing. That diversity makes the learning experience richer for everyone in the room.
Ongoing learning and reflective practice: Good educators keep asking themselves what is working and what could be better. That kind of honest reflection is how children keep getting better outcomes.

Practices:

Holistic approaches: A child's development is not made up of neat little separate boxes. Everything is connected, and good early childhood education treats it that way.
Play based learning: Play is not time off from learning. At this age, it is actually one of the most effective ways children grow and develop, full stop.
Intentional teaching: Educators here are deliberate about what they bring to each interaction and experience. The best early learning rooms do not run on autopilot.
Learning through relationships: The connections children build with educators, with each other, and with their families are not just nice to have. They are a core part of how children actually learn.
Assessment for learning: Educators pay close attention to where each child is at and use that to figure out what they need next. It is not about testing; it is about making sure no child gets left behind.

Play Based Learning Within the Early Year Learning Framework

Play gets a bad reputation sometimes, like it is just what kids do when nothing important is happening. But within the early years learning framework, play based learning is one of the most effective tools available at this age, and good educators know how to use it with purpose.

At Broadmeadows Early Learning Centre, play based learning is not just free time. Educators plan play experiences with specific developmental goals in mind and observe closely along the way. What is the child drawn to? Where are they finding things difficult? What are they ready to explore next? Those observations get documented and feed directly back into how programs are shaped for each child.

The daily routine brings together individual learning time, small group activities, and larger group interactions. Each one serves a different purpose. Individual time gives a child space to move at their own pace. Small groups open up conversation and collaboration. Larger groups build the kind of social confidence children will need when they start school.

Families play a role in this too. Parents understand their children in ways that take time to learn, and that knowledge genuinely helps when it comes to shaping programs that work. It is a two-way relationship, not just a drop-off and pick-up arrangement. The team is always happy to chat, so feel free to get in touch through the Contact Us page.

Broadmeadows Early Learning Center

Discover Early Childcare Education at Broadmeadows Early Learning Centre

Broadmeadows Early Learning Centre is a centre that can genuinely explain the thinking behind what they do, and back it up with programs that deliver real outcomes for children.

The early childcare education here is guided by the early years learning framework and built around what each child actually needs. The centre is owner-operated, which means the person leading it is present and invested in a way that is hard to find in a larger corporate childcare setting. Families from Broadmeadows, Fawkner, Oak Park, and across the northern suburbs have been choosing this centre for years, and the consistent enrolments speak to the trust that has been built over time.

Whether your child is just starting out or getting ready to move into primary school, the programs here are designed to support that whole journey. Spots do fill up, so it is worth reaching out sooner rather than later. Visit the Enrolment page to get started, or get in touch through the Contact Us page if you would like to come in for a look around first.

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Broadmeadows Early Learning Center

Frequently Asked Questions

It is Australia's approved national framework for early childhood education, and every early learning service is legally required to follow it. In plain terms, it is what guides educators in building programs that actually support children's learning and development, rather than just filling the hours.
The Early Years Learning Framework is built around principles like secure and respectful relationships, genuine partnerships with families, respect for diversity, and high expectations for every child. These principles are not just written down somewhere; they shape how educators actually work with children and engage with families daily.
It focuses on helping children develop a strong sense of identity, emotional well-being, communication skills, and confidence. That happens through a mix of play-based and structured learning that is tailored to where each child actually is in their development, not where they are assumed to be.
Early childcare education supports cognitive, emotional, and social development all at once. Through play, structured activities, and the relationships children build with educators and other kids, they develop the foundational skills and confidence they will carry into primary school. Getting that foundation right in the early years makes a real difference later on.
The NQS is the national set of benchmarks that all early childhood education and care services in Australia are assessed against. It looks at things like education programs, safety, the physical environment, staffing, and the quality of relationships across the service. It is essentially how the sector makes sure centres are actually doing right by children and families.

If you have any questions or need further clarification on anything, please feel free to ask!

Broadmeadows Early Learning Center
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The best way to learn about our centre is to see it for yourself. We welcome visits anytime between 10:00AM and 11:00AM or 2:30PM and 4:00PM.

Broadmeadows Early Learning Center
Address
391-393 Camp Rd Broadmeadows VIC 3047
Broadmeadows Early Learning Center
Phone Number
(03) 91919580


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