Every setting has one this summer. The child who spends the whole garden session ferrying pebbles from the digging patch to the water tray, one determined fistful at a time. Or the one who posts every car over the fence, wraps the dolls in so many muslins they look mummified, or turns in circles until they fall over laughing. To a tired adult in August, it can look like mess, mischief or both.
It’s usually neither. These are schemas: repeated patterns of play that show you, more clearly than almost anything else, how a child is thinking. Once you can see them, you never quite watch children the same way again.
The patterns hiding in the chaos
A schema is a child running the same experiment over and over, in different materials, until an idea is secure. The classics turn up in every setting. Trajectory: throwing, dropping, launching, and the endless fascination with things that fly and fall. Rotation: spinning wheels, turning taps, whirling on the spot. Enveloping: wrapping objects, covering paintings entirely in one colour, hiding in the den, wearing three dressing-up outfits at once. Transporting: our pebble-ferrier, plus every child who has ever emptied the home corner into a handbag and relocated it.
The clue is repetition across contexts. A child in a trajectory schema doesn’t just throw the ball; they throw the cutlery, drop peas from the highchair with the focus of a lab scientist, and adore the sensory joy of water flung from a cup. Different materials, same investigation. Once one member of staff starts spotting them, the whole room catches it, and suddenly the observation notes get sharper overnight.
Work with the schema, not against it
Here’s where the idea earns its keep. The child who throws everything is going to keep throwing, because their brain is mid-project. You can spend the summer saying “we don’t throw” on a loop, or you can give the schema a legitimate outlet: beanbags and a target, skittles, wet sponges against the fence on a hot day, rolled socks into a laundry basket. Same urge, no casualties, and a child who feels understood rather than told off.
Observation comes first. Watch for a fortnight and jot what you see: not “played nicely in the garden” but “carried water in a teapot to the sandpit four times, then moved all the diggers there too”. Patterns like that are planning gold. They tell you which resources to put out, which invitations will land, and why the carefully arranged provocation was ignored in favour of the wheelbarrow.
Our Schemas: Understanding Children’s Play Patterns course takes you through the common schemas, how to identify them in everyday play, and how to plan provision that supports and extends them rather than colliding with them.
The parent conversation that changes everything
Schemas might be the single best piece of theory to share with parents, because it reframes behaviour they’re worried about. The parent apologising at pick-up because their son “destroys everything” hears that he’s investigating trajectory and connection, that it’s a recognised pattern of learning, and that you’re channelling it into skittles. Watch their shoulders drop. The toilet roll wrapped around the entire bathroom stops being naughtiness and becomes an enveloping schema with ambition.
That conversation builds trust faster than a term of newsletters, and it sends parents home watching their child with new eyes. Some of the best observations you’ll get all year will come back from families who’ve caught the habit.
Learn to read the patterns in children’s play
The course covers the common schemas, observing and identifying them, planning provision around them and explaining them to parents, with an NFAQ-accredited certificate on completion.
The pebbles will still migrate to the water tray tomorrow. The difference is that you’ll know why, you’ll have the wheelbarrow ready, and you’ll have something genuinely interesting to tell his mum at half past five.

