What school readiness isn't
It is worth saying clearly, because there is a small industry of products and programs that suggest otherwise. School readiness is not:
Knowing the alphabet. Schools teach reading. They teach it well. They expect to. Most NSW kindergarten teachers will tell you that a child who arrives knowing letters but not knowing how to share, listen, or ask for help is harder to teach than a child who arrives without the letters.
Counting to a hundred. Counting fluency is built in the early school years. What matters more is the underlying number sense: the child notices that there are three of something. They put one bowl per child. They understand more, less, same.
Writing their name perfectly. Most children develop the fine motor strength for clear handwriting between the ages of five and seven. Pushing it earlier often means a four-year-old learns the wrong pencil grip and has to unlearn it later.
The three things that actually matter
Decades of NSW longitudinal research, and the experience of every Kindergarten teacher we know, points consistently to three things.
- Self-regulation. Can the child wait? Can they manage frustration? Can they hold an idea while listening to someone else?
- Oral language. Can they tell a story? Follow a two-step instruction? Ask for help in clear words?
- Persistence and curiosity. Will they stick with something hard? Try again? Get interested in a problem?
Build those three, in any order, in a four-year-old, and a primary school teacher will tell you you have given them gold.
Self-regulation: how it gets built
Self-regulation is not a personality trait. It is a habit, built through small daily practice in a small group of children with a calm adult nearby.
It looks like waiting your turn for the swing. Sitting through a group story. Coming inside when asked. Holding off on the bite of fruit until everyone has theirs. Hearing no, and adjusting. Letting another child have the red truck and finding something else to do.
None of this is taught with a worksheet. It is taught with the rhythm of the day, and a hundred small adult moments of wait, please, your friend is talking.
Oral language: more important than letters
The number one predictor of how a child will read in their first three years of school is not whether they knew letters at four. It is the size and richness of their spoken vocabulary.
Children build vocabulary by being talked with, not at, by adults who use real words and listen back. They build it by telling stories of their own day. They build it by being read picture books, again and again, by adults who slow down for new words rather than skipping over them.
If you do one thing in the year before school, read aloud every day. Twenty minutes. Anything. The same book again if your child wants. The benefit is enormous and well evidenced.
Persistence and curiosity: what we watch for
The third thing is the hardest to put on a checklist, and the most important. Will the child stick with something hard for ten more minutes? Will they try a different way after the first one didn't work? Will they ask why?
This is built by adults who let problems sit, who don't rush in to fix everything, who say have a go, I'll be over here. It is also built by giving children real, slightly difficult, materials. A real paintbrush. A real screwdriver and a real piece of wood. Real glass jars to pour water between. The sense of mastery is genuine because the work is genuine.
A typical week in our four-year-old room
For a sense of how this gets practised in a Reggio-inspired centre, here is the rough shape of a week with our older children, the Koalas.
Monday morning. Group time, twenty minutes. The children share something from the weekend. Listening, taking turns, holding an idea while another speaks. Self-regulation in real time.
Tuesday outside. Worm farm check. Watering the vegetable garden. A long stretch of unstructured outdoor play. An adult on the edge of the action, narrating, asking, listening. Persistence builds in the sandpit better than anywhere else.
Wednesday studio. The current project, often a long thread the educators are documenting over weeks. Real materials. Watercolours. Wire. Clay. The hundred languages.
Thursday cooking. Measuring, pouring, waiting for the timer, sharing among friends. Maths and self-regulation in the same hour, with cake at the end.
Friday story. A long picture book, slowly. New words flagged and turned over. Twenty minutes of focussed listening, building toward the stamina they will need at school.
Notes on local schools
Most of our children go on to one of the following.
St Ives North Public School. Top performer in the Sydney North Shore. Strong selective stream. Houses the Ku-ring-gai Unit for Gifted and Talented Students. Walked our children there in 2025 for the Book Week parade.
St Ives Public School. Memorial Avenue. Long-established central St Ives school with a strong community feel.
Pymble Public School. Crown Road. Sustainability and vegetable garden program that fits naturally with what the children do here.
Sydney Grammar St Ives Preparatory School. Independent boys, founded 1954, on Ayres Road. Some of our children sit Sydney Grammar transition assessments at four.
Pymble Ladies' College. Independent girls. K to 12. Has its own Junior School. Several of our older children move into PLC's preparatory or Kindergarten cohort.
Knox Grammar. Independent boys, Wahroonga. Knox Prep is on Billyard Avenue.
Brigidine College St Ives (independent Catholic girls 7-12) and Masada College (independent Jewish co-ed) take some of our older siblings.
Every one of these schools, public or independent, will tell you the same thing: send us a child who can listen, ask, and try again, and we will teach them anything.
A simple year-before checklist
If your child is starting Kindergarten next year, this is what we'd quietly suggest. Nothing needs to be perfect.
- Read aloud every day. The same book again is fine.
- Eat at the table together when you can. Conversation is curriculum.
- Let your child do real things in the kitchen, with a real knife you trust them with.
- Walk somewhere together once a week. Slowly. With time to notice things.
- Allow boredom. Resist screens as the default response to it.
- Practise saying goodbye and coming back, in small ways, so the school drop-off is not the first time.
- Build the habit of waiting. Of taking turns. Of waiting again.
- Learn the school's name and the teacher's name together. Visit the school grounds before the first day.
About our centre
St Ives Chase Kindergarten is a small Reggio-inspired centre on a quiet street in St Ives Chase, with a generous outdoor yard under mature gum trees. Forty children, ages 2.5 to 6. Two classrooms. Open 7am to 6pm. Most of our children go on to St Ives North Public School and the other local schools listed above.
If you would like to talk about whether your child is ready, or what the year before school looks like with us, book a tour and come in.