TCHR5001 Play and Pedagogies in Early Childhood Education
Assessment 1: Pitch Your Pedagogy
Due Date: Monday 15th September 2025, 11:59 pm AEST (start of Week 4)
Type: Digital Presentation (Recorded) – Individual
Length: 10 minutes (equivalent to 1500 words)
Weighting: 50%
Generative AI use: Permitted with strict restrictions and mandatory declaration (see policy below)
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ULOs assessed: ULO1, ULO2, ULO3, ULO4
Rationale
Early childhood teachers must advocate for play as a fundamental right and core pedagogical approach. Families often express concern about play-based learning versus formal academic preparation for school. This task requires you to prepare and deliver a confident, evidence-informed pitch that explains and justifies play-based pedagogy to families of 4–5-year-olds during a family information night. Your presentation must draw on theory, research, policy and your emerging professional philosophy.
Task Description
Imagine you are an early childhood teacher presenting at a family information night. Some families are concerned that play-based approaches do not sufficiently prepare children for school, while others are interested but seek clearer understanding of the value and benefits of play. Your task is to create a 10-minute recorded presentation that addresses these concerns, justifies play-based pedagogy, and demonstrates its importance for children’s current learning and future success.
Instructions
- Step 1 – Complete the Pitch Template
- Download the Assessment 1 Pitch Template from Blackboard (Assessment 1 folder).
- Fill in all sections including:
- Introduction (30 sec – 1 min): Introduce yourself and acknowledge family concerns.
- Role of play (2 min): Explain play’s contribution to learning, development and wellbeing across domains; include one concrete play-based example.
- Personal philosophy (2 min): Articulate your philosophy of play and its influence on your teaching practice.
- Successful play-based environment (2 min): Describe physical, social and temporal elements that support effective play-based learning.
- Challenges and solutions (2 min): Identify barriers to implementing play pedagogy and realistic strategies to overcome them.
- Summary & farewell (30 sec – 1 min): Recap key messages and close positively.
- Include a URL/link to your recorded presentation and a reference list.
- Step 2 – Create Supporting Slides
- Maximum 15 slides (preferably fewer).
- Use PowerPoint, Canva, Prezi or similar tool.
- Ensure slides are clear, uncluttered, readable (easy-to-read font, appropriate sizing, high contrast).
- Submit slides as PPT/PDF via Turnitin.
- Step 3 – Record the Presentation
- Deliver a 10-minute oral presentation (face visible on camera recommended).
- Use Zoom, PowerPoint recording, or other reliable software.
- Export as MP4 file.
- Submit recording via VoiceThread link on Blackboard.
Supporting Evidence Requirements
- At least one theoretical perspective from Module 2 (e.g. socio-cultural, constructivist, post-structuralist, Reggio Emilia, Froebel, Piaget, Vygotsky)
- Minimum 8 references (unit textbook + peer-reviewed articles/book chapters + EYLF v2.0 + NQS + UNCRC + ECA Code of Ethics + developmental milestones)
- APA 7th edition for all citations and reference list (not counted in word limit)
Formatting & Submission
- Use provided Pitch Template (Word).
- Font: Arial or Times New Roman 12 pt; 1.5 or double line spacing for text entries.
- File naming: SurnameInitial_TCHR5001_A1 (e.g. KamenaracO_TCHR5001_A1)
- Submit three items:
- Completed Pitch Template (Word/PDF) → Turnitin
- Slide deck (PPT/PDF) → Turnitin
- MP4 recording → VoiceThread
Generative AI Policy
Permitted uses: Clarify concepts, generate preliminary ideas, summarise readings, edit drafts.
Prohibited uses: Generate definitions, arguments, written content for final submission, produce slides or script sections.
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Mandatory declaration: Add statement at end of reference list (e.g. “I used [tool name] to summarise Module 2 readings and brainstorm initial structure. All final content and delivery are my own.”)
Undeclared or prohibited use = academic misconduct.
Academic Integrity & Late Penalties
Full adherence to SCU Academic Integrity Framework required. Breaches may result in zero marks or unit failure.
Late penalty: 5% per day (or part thereof) unless special consideration approved.
Marking & Feedback
SCU letter grade + completed rubric + written feedback. Results posted within 21 days.
Play is the primary mode through which young children construct knowledge, develop self-regulation and build social competence. A socio-cultural lens highlights how collaborative play with peers and educators scaffolds language, problem-solving and emotional understanding. Intentional play-based environments that balance child agency with educator guidance align directly with EYLF principles and outcomes (Fleer 2019, https://doi.org/10.1177/1463949119885293). Strong advocacy for play requires clear articulation of developmental benefits across physical, cognitive, social-emotional and creative domains. Effective communication with families strengthens community trust in play pedagogy.
References
- Australian Government Department of Education (AGDE). (2022). Belonging, being & becoming: The Early Years Learning Framework for Australia V2.0. Canberra: AGDE. Available at: https://www.acecqa.gov.au/sites/default/files/2023-01/EYLF-2022-V2.0.pdf
- Fleer, M. (2019). ‘Conceptual play: Foregrounding imagination and cognition during concept formation in early childhood education’, Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 20(4), pp. 351–364. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/1463949119885293
- Wood, E. (2019). ‘The play-pedagogy interface in early childhood education’, Early Child Development and Care, 189(11), pp. 1771–1783. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/03004430.2019.1608191
- Edwards, S. & Cutter-Mackenzie, A. (2021). ‘Pedagogical play types: What do they suggest for learning about sustainability in early childhood education?’, International Journal of Early Childhood, 53(1), pp. 63–80. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13158-021-00289-7
- Leggett, N. (2020). ‘Play-based learning: The role of the educator in supporting young children’s agency’, Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 45(3), pp. 245–257. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/1836939120936999