As educational priorities increasingly focus on developing future-ready competencies, early childhood pedagogy must emphasize meaningful, engaging, and cognitively rich learning experiences. This article explores the integration of thinking routines within Play-Based Deep Learning (PBDL) as a strategy to strengthen teaching competence, pedagogy, and assessment practices in early childhood education. While play is often perceived primarily as recreational, this paper argues that intentionally designed play, guided by deep learning principles embodied in the 6Cs — Character, Collaboration, Communication, Creativity, Citizenship, and Critical Thinking — can serve as a powerful vehicle for deep cognitive, social, and emotional development. Thinking routines are positioned as cognitive scaffolds that make children’s thinking visible and transform play activities into opportunities for inquiry, reflection, and deeper understanding. Using a qualitative conceptual framework supported by classroom observations, teacher interviews, and relevant literature, the study examines how play-based environments integrated with thinking routines foster meaningful engagement, problem-solving, and socio-emotional growth among young learners. The findings suggest that when teachers intentionally design and facilitate play experiences aligned with learning goals, children demonstrate higher motivation, stronger collaboration, and greater cognitive depth. Furthermore, teacher competence in planning, facilitating, and assessing play-based learning is essential for maximizing outcomes. The paper proposes a practical pedagogical framework that integrates play, deep learning principles, and thinking routines to support authentic assessment and enhance professional teaching practice in early childhood classrooms.
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