Plan, Build, Tell
The child plans what to build, builds it with blocks, then tells you about it — a plan-do-review cycle that grows planning, patterning, and counting.
Ages 36–66 months
Materials
- A basket of blocks in a few colors and sizes
- Optional — a small mat or tray to define each child's building space
Steps
- Plan: ask the child what they want to make and let them say it out loud.
- Do: give unhurried time to build the plan, joining in only when invited.
- Notice the math as it happens — "You made red, blue, red, blue — that's a pattern!"
- Review: when finished, ask the child to tell you what they built and how.
- Count the blocks together as you tidy up, touching each one once.
Variations
- Challenge the child to copy and extend a simple AB pattern you start.
- Take a photo of the plan and compare it with what was built.
- Build a "tower of ten" and count each block as it is added.
Differentiation
- Younger builders can plan with one word and build freely.
- Older builders can plan two steps ("first a wall, then a door") and follow both.
Accessibility
- Offer larger, lighter blocks for developing fine-motor control.
- Accept plans shared through pointing, signs, or any language the child speaks.
Safety
- Use child-safe blocks; supervise so towers fall away from faces.
Practices these skills
Evidence
- Developmentally Appropriate Practice in Early Childhood Programs (4th ed.) — National Association for the Education of Young Children · 2022 · National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC)
Early Atlas