From the first steps to the first words, every moment in early childhood shapes who your child becomes. Holistic child development means nurturing emotional, physical, social, cognitive, and creative growth together so children feel secure, confident, and excited to experience the world around them.
In this blog, we explain what holistic child development is, why it matters in the early years, and how it supports children at every stage of their growth.
Holistic child development is an approach that supports all areas of a child’s growth equally. It recognises that learning, behaviour, and development are closely linked.
Here’s what this looks like in practice.
This approach nurtures physical movement, communication, emotional awareness, and thinking skills together. Play, for example, supports language, confidence, and coordination at the same time.
Early childhood development is most effective when skills develop together. Emotional security supports learning, while social confidence encourages communication and curiosity.
The early years are critical because around 90% of brain development occurs before age five, shaping emotional regulation, learning ability, and behaviour long-term.
Here are the key reasons this approach matters.
Emotional development in early years helps children understand feelings, build relationships, and manage stress. The EYFS identifies emotional wellbeing as a foundation for learning and development.
Research supports the importance of holistic education. Some studies confirm that balanced development improves long-term learning, well-being, and school outcomes.
Children progress through recognised stages that build on one another. Holistic support helps each stage develop smoothly.
Below is how holistic development supports growing children.
Child development stages cover physical milestones, communication, emotional awareness, and social interaction. Supporting all areas together prevents developmental delays and reduces frustration.
For instance, building with blocks supports hand-eye coordination, teamwork, and problem-solving at the same time.
Children supported holistically are often better prepared for school, showing independence, confidence, and engagement with learning.
Exceptional nurseries embed holistic development into daily care and learning. This creates calm environments where children feel valued and supported.
Play-based learning, predictable routines, and positive relationships support physical, emotional, and social growth throughout the day.
Nurseries in Wimbledon follow the EYFS framework, ensuring children’s learning, safety, and development meet national expectations.
Children develop best when parents and nurseries work in partnership, as consistency between home and nursery helps children feel secure and confident. Shared routines, clear communication, and aligned values support emotional wellbeing, positive behaviour, and healthy learning habits throughout the early years.
Your child’s early years shape who they become. At Wimbledon Day Nursery, holistic child development is at the heart of everything we do, supporting emotional wellbeing, confidence, and learning every day.
Give your child the strongest start; contact us today to arrange a visit, meet our experienced team, and see how our nurturing environment helps children flourish from the very beginning.
Holistic child development includes emotional, physical, social, and cognitive growth, supporting the whole child rather than focusing only on academic learning.
Holistic development matters because early experiences shape confidence, wellbeing, and learning habits that influence a child’s behaviour, relationships, and education long-term.
Emotional development helps children manage feelings, build relationships, and concentrate better, which directly supports curiosity, communication, and effective learning.
Exceptional nurseries support holistic development daily through play, routines, social interaction, and emotionally supportive environments guided by the EYFS framework.
Parents can support holistic development by maintaining routines, encouraging play and conversation, and working closely with their child’s nursery to provide consistent care.