The curriculum guide

Every center says they're "play-based."
Few actually are.

Twelve curriculums shape almost every early learning program in the country. Some are rigorously trained philosophies. Some are marketing labels. This guide tells you the difference — and gives you the exact questions that separate the real thing from the rebrand.

A parent on a tour using Child Care Compass to compare an early learning center with the director

How to use this guide

There is no "best" curriculum. There's only the best fit for your child.

1. Skim the twelve

Read the one-line summary on each card below. Two or three will feel right for your family. Ignore the rest for now.

2. Read the full guide

Open each shortlisted curriculum. Pay attention to the cons and the visit red flags — that's where marketing falls apart.

3. Bring the questions

Each guide ends with curriculum-specific questions. On your visit, the answers tell you if a center actually practices what its sign says.

The twelve philosophies

Decoded, one by one.

Read this first

"Play-based," "child-led," "Reggio-inspired" — what they actually mean.

Curriculum names are not regulated. A center can put "Montessori" on the door without a single AMI-trained teacher inside. "Reggio-inspired" almost always means "we liked the photos but skipped the documentation practice." "Play-based" can mean a thoughtfully designed environment — or a TV in the corner.

  • "“Montessori” without AMI/AMS"

    Materials may be present but the trained-observer pedagogy isn't.

  • "“Reggio-inspired”"

    Real Reggio requires daily documentation panels. Ask to see this week's.

  • "“Play-based”"

    Ask what intentional learning is woven into the play, and how it's tracked.

  • "“STEAM curriculum” for toddlers"

    Often marketing. Two-year-olds learn STEAM through water tables, not worksheets.

Quick reference

Which curriculum fits which child?

A starting point, not a verdict. Children are individuals — these patterns help you narrow the field before you tour.

CurriculumOften suitsStructure
MontessoriSelf-directed, focused childrenLow — child chooses work
Reggio EmiliaCurious, expressive, social childrenLow — emergent projects
WaldorfImaginative children who love routineMedium — rhythmic days
HighScopeChildren who like planning aheadMedium — plan-do-review
Bank StreetChildren who learn through doingMedium — experience-based
Play-BasedMost young childrenLow to medium — varies widely
Creative CurriculumChildren in larger group settingsHigher — themed studies
Academic / Direct InstructionChildren who like clear right answersHigh — teacher-led lessons
Forest SchoolActive children who love being outsideLow — nature-led
RIE / PiklerInfants and young toddlersVery low — respectful caregiving
Tools of the MindChildren needing self-regulation supportMedium — scaffolded play
Religious / Faith-BasedFamilies wanting faith integrated dailyVaries by tradition

What matters more than the label

  • • A lead teacher who has stayed two or more years
  • • Child-to-staff ratios at or below state minimums
  • • A director who answers hard questions without defensiveness
  • • Outdoor time daily, in almost any weather
  • • A discipline approach you'd use at home

Common parent questions

Does the curriculum even matter for infants?
Less than the caregiver. Consistency, warmth, and responsive care outweigh philosophy under age two.
Can my child switch curriculums later?
Yes. Children adapt. The bigger transition is usually to elementary, not between preschools.
Is more expensive better?
No. Price reflects rent and teacher pay more than program quality. Tour, don't assume.
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Unlock all 12 curriculums in full

Pros, cons, the marketing claims to question, the exact questions to ask on visit, plus 3 deep-dive parent guides and the complete visit evaluation checklist.

  • Honest pros & cons for all 12 curriculums
  • Visit-day red flags most parents miss
  • Curriculum-specific questions to ask
  • The complete vetted evaluation checklist
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  • The first-week transition guide
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