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What makes a good learning journal?

Are your learning journals outstanding and relevant?

Learning journals vary greatly from setting to setting and commonly many learning journals are now completed through online apps and websites. As there is no clear set way of completing a learning journal it can sometimes be difficult to judge what should be included; whether there is too much or too little, photos or no photos? Colourful writing and art work? . With increasing pressure on practitioners to complete paperwork learning journals are becoming harder to complete and becoming more and more standardised. Learning journals are an important piece to keep as they provide the necessary evidence and support all tracking and development documents. They also show a clear path of the child’s learning journey, evidencing starting points, progress and interests. This in turn helps to support planning and ensures every child has their individual learning needs met. Not only are they important for practitioners, they are also incredibly important for parents. They provide valuable and treasured stories, photos, and key milestones in their child’s development. They become much loved keepsakes that are fondly looked over for years and ensure that all parents feel fully included in their child’s development. Also if used regularly and if practitioners promote child input they can become valuable to the children where they take pride and pleasure from seeing their own work and photos used and treasured. This can be a huge confidence boost for some children to know that they are appreciated and their work is seen as special and valuable. 

What makes a good learning journal?

Follow these top tips to ensure your learning journals contain all the things they need for the child, practitioners and parents:

Theres some great examples of learning journals here – 

  1. Downloadable learning journal
  2. Documents to keep inside a learning journal
  3. Learning story template
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