Drawing on insights from a Sunday Times article on parent–child brain synchrony, interactive story time does more than entertain. Research shows that when adults and children read together, their brains begin to synchronize, supporting attention, connection, and understanding. The more engaging and responsive the reading experience is, the stronger this synchrony becomes.
This month’s Quick Tip explores five simple ways to make any book more interactive and engaging for young children. From character voices to props to playful gestures, these strategies help children stay connected, curious, and involved during shared reading—no special materials required.
👉 Read the full article from the Sunday Times on brain synchrony during shared reading.
👉Watch the Quick Tip video
Balance Fidelity and Flexibility: Follow intervention guidelines but adapt responsively to family needs and contexts.
Prioritize Alliance: Building trust and collaboration with caregivers may be as critical as technical fidelity.
Support Caregiver Confidence: Provide coaching that enhances caregiver self-efficacy, as this predicts sustained strategy use.
Use Video Feedback: Behavioral coding of sessions can help providers reflect on both fidelity and adaptations.
Focus on Everyday Routines: Embed strategies into natural family routines to increase relevance and sustainability.
This study shows that bringing evidence‑based interventions into everyday early intervention programs is more complicated than it might seem. It also suggests that following a model “by the book” doesn’t automatically lead to strong caregiver engagement or a positive working relationship. What seems to matter just as much is the ability to adapt in thoughtful, responsive ways that help families feel supported and understood. These findings highlight the importance of approaches that balance fidelity with the realities of each family, provider, and community setting, so that interventions can work well in real life—not just in research studies.
Click the article (above) to learn more about why strong relationships—not just strict fidelity—drive meaningful early intervention outcomes.
Playdough offers children a world of sensory exploration and creativity right at their fingertips. This Play of the Month invites little hands to squish, roll, cut, build, and imagine—turning a simple ball of dough into roads, creatures, cupcakes, or whole pretend worlds. With just a few tools (or none at all), playdough becomes a bridge to connection, communication, and joyful learning.
See below for activity ideas and learning goals linked to the ESDM Curriculum Checklist items to help you discover the play level that best suits your child or the children and families you support in early learning environments.
Pay attention to what children like (or seem curious about) and follow their lead as long as you are a part of the action, too. Remember, the most important thing is for children to have fun doing this with you! Fun means engagement and that excites children's brains and bodies for meaningful learning to happen.
Simple Play (Sensorimotor & Exploratory)
These activities focus on cause-and-effect, sensory exploration, and basic motor skills—like banging, mouthing, or dropping—just to see what happens.
Combination Play (Functional & Constructive)
These activities involve using materials together with intention—building, matching, or organizing.
Cutting & Snipping- Offer child‑safe scissors or plastic knives and encourage the child to cut dough into pieces.
What it works: Supports hand strength, bilateral coordination, and purposeful tool use.
Interaction tip: Keep language simple (“Cut… open… small piece… big piece”) to support sequencing.
Stamp & Build- Use cookie cutters, stamps, or lids to create shapes, then arrange them into patterns or simple structures.
What it works: Encourages planning, combining shapes, and early constructive thinking.
Interaction tip: Let the child choose the order or pattern — follow their lead.
Symbolic Play (Pretend & Representational)
These activities support imagination, role play, and storytelling.