Unpredictable environments can disrupt healthy development, while predictable environments support positive outcomes, particularly in the first five years of life. This reflects how the brain functions as a prediction system, constantly forming expectations about the world. When experiences align with those expectations, stress and cognitive load decrease, allowing children to focus, engage, and learn more effectively. This helps explain why young children are naturally drawn to predictable patterns in their environment.
Building on this understanding, this session explores how predictable teaching strategies can reduce stress, improve attention, and support learning in early childhood classrooms. The focus is on mathematics, where early disadvantage often leads to long-term attainment gaps. Because early maths performance strongly predicts later academic success and life outcomes, creating predictable, supportive learning environments in the early years is crucial for narrowing these gaps and giving children the best possible start.