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Preschool Learning

Play-Based Learning vs. Traditional Learning in Preschool

If you’ve toured more than one preschool, you’ve probably noticed that classrooms can feel very different from each other. One school has children sitting at desks with workbooks. Another has children building towers, painting murals, and playing house. Parents often wonder: which approach actually prepares my child better for kindergarten and beyond?

The answer, backed by decades of early childhood research, might surprise you. This guide breaks down both approaches — play-based and traditional — so you can make an informed decision for your child.

What Is Play-Based Learning?

Play-based learning is an educational approach in which children acquire knowledge and develop skills through structured and unstructured play. It doesn’t mean children simply do whatever they want — rather, teachers intentionally design the environment and activities so that play naturally leads to learning outcomes.

In a play-based classroom, children might build a city with blocks (learning geometry and physics), run a pretend grocery store (learning math and social skills), or create a painting inspired by a story (developing literacy and fine motor skills). The learning is real — it’s just embedded in experiences the child finds engaging and meaningful.

What Is Traditional Learning in Preschool?

Traditional preschool approaches lean more toward direct instruction — teacher-led lessons, worksheets, structured academic drills, and measurable academic benchmarks. Children may spend more time at desks or tables and less time in free or guided play.

This approach can produce faster short-term gains in specific academic skills like letter recognition or number writing. However, research raises questions about whether those gains are sustained and whether the approach adequately develops the whole child.

What Does Research Say?

The research is remarkably consistent: play-based learning produces better long-term outcomes for children in preschool and early elementary school. A landmark study published in Science found that children in direct instruction classrooms scored higher on specific academic tests at age 5 — but by age 7, children from play-based environments had caught up academically and significantly outperformed direct-instruction peers in creativity, social skills, emotional regulation, and motivation.

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) formally endorsed play as essential to healthy brain development in 2018, noting that play builds executive function, creativity, language skills, and social-emotional competence — all of which are stronger predictors of long-term success than early academic drilling.

The social skills component is especially significant. We cover how play specifically builds social competence in our post on how preschool helps improve social skills in children ages 2 to 5.

Benefits of Play-Based Learning

  • Builds intrinsic motivation — children learn to love learning
  • Develops executive function skills: planning, flexibility, self-control
  • Strengthens language and communication naturally through interaction
  • Encourages problem-solving and creativity
  • Builds social skills through cooperative and dramatic play
  • Reduces stress and anxiety — learning feels safe and enjoyable
  • Supports gross and fine motor development through physical play

Are There Situations Where Structured Learning Is Better?

Yes. Children who are further behind in specific academic skills — letter recognition, number sense — sometimes benefit from more targeted, direct instruction as a supplement to play-based learning. The most effective preschool programs, including LSA Preschool, blend both: structured, teacher-guided learning moments within a primarily play-based framework.

The key word is ‘supplement.’ Research does not support replacing play with worksheets in preschool. It supports adding intentional learning opportunities within a play-rich environment.

How to Evaluate a Preschool’s Learning Approach

When you visit a preschool, ask to spend time in the classroom. Look for: Are children engaged and curious? Do teachers participate in and guide play? Is there a mix of child-led and teacher-led activities? Our guide on what to look for in a preschool in Deerfield Beach gives you a full evaluation checklist.

LSA Preschool’s Approach: The Best of Both Worlds

At LSA Preschool, we use a research-informed blended approach. Our curriculum provides structured learning in literacy, numeracy, and language development — embedded within a play-rich environment that keeps children engaged, curious, and emotionally regulated. Children develop all the skills listed in our kindergarten readiness guide for 3-year-olds through experiences they genuinely enjoy.

We believe that when children love coming to school, everything else — learning, development, social growth — follows naturally.

Ready to Give Your Child the Best Start?

At LSA Preschool in Deerfield Beach, FL, we are dedicated to nurturing every child’s growth through a loving, stimulating environment. Whether you’re exploring enrollment options or ready to visit our campus, we’d love to meet your family.

Schedule a Tour at LSA Preschool — Let’s find the perfect program for your child.

Explore all our preschool programs and services to find the right fit.

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