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Physical and Intellectual Development Training Requirements for ECE in Washington

Find out how Washington’s CE requirements apply to Physical and Intellectual Development training — and how brightwheel Professional Development courses count toward your compliance.

Washington Physical and Intellectual Development requirement

Washington requires licensed childcare staff to complete 10 hours per year of continuing education as a condition of state licensing. Physical and Intellectual Development training counts toward these requirements — topics such as curriculum development, cognitive development, and language development are recognized qualifying categories under the Washington DCYF continuing education requirements. brightwheel Professional Development is accepted in Washington and offers IACET‑accredited Physical and Intellectual Development courses that staff can complete on demand, with all completions tracked automatically in brightwheel. brightwheel courses auto‑post completed hours directly to the Washington MERIT Registry.

Washington — Physical and Intellectual Development training at a glance
Annual CE hours (teachers)10 hours per training year
Training periodAnnual
Physical and Intellectual Development maps tocurriculum development, cognitive development, and language development
Regulatory authorityWashington DCYF
NotesDCYF fiscal year Jul 1–Jun 30; up to 5 hrs carry over
brightwheel approved in Washington✓ Yes — accepted for Washington CE requirements
Auto‑posts to Washington MERIT Registry✓ Yes — completed course hours post automatically to staff registry accounts
Physical and Intellectual Development courses in WashingtonView brightwheel courses

About Physical and Intellectual Development (CDA II)

Physical and Intellectual Development — CDA Competency Area II — covers the skills educators need to support children’s cognitive, language, and physical growth through intentional, developmentally appropriate learning experiences from birth through age 5.

The first five years represent the most rapid period of brain development in the human lifespan. Educators who understand how children build language, think, and develop physically are better equipped to design environments and interactions that accelerate school readiness and close developmental gaps early.


Washington Physical and Intellectual Development training requirements

Washington childcare staff must complete 10 hours of annual continuing education as a condition of maintaining a license from the Washington DCYF. Physical and Intellectual Development training counts toward these hours — curriculum development, cognitive development, and language development are recognized qualifying CE topics. brightwheel Professional Development is accepted in Washington and offers IACET‑accredited courses aligned with the Physical and Intellectual Development competency area.

Staff complete brightwheel’s Physical and Intellectual Development courses on demand — each course is 1 hour, self‑paced, and includes an assessment with a certificate of completion. All completions are recorded automatically in the brightwheel administrator dashboard, making compliance documentation straightforward for Washington licensing audits.


What Physical and Intellectual Development training covers

brightwheel’s Physical and Intellectual Development courses cover the knowledge and skills early childhood educators need to support children in this competency area. Topics include:

Brain development and early learning science
Early literacy strategies and language‑rich environments
Numeracy, STEM foundations, and mathematical thinking
Gross and fine motor skill development activities
Curriculum planning aligned with developmental milestones
Supporting dual‑language learners and English language acquisition
Learning environment design that invites exploration
Cognitive development through play‑based learning

Early Achievers and Physical and Intellectual Development

Early Achievers
✓ Physical and Intellectual Development training supports Early Achievers quality criteria

Early Achievers is Washington’s Quality Rating and Improvement System. Staff professional development in CDA‑aligned competency areas is a core component of Early Achievers quality ratings — programs that demonstrate ongoing staff training earn higher ratings. brightwheel’s IACET‑accredited courses align with the professional development requirements recognized by Early Achievers, and the automatic tracking dashboard makes it straightforward to demonstrate staff training during program quality evaluations.

Early Achievers →

How brightwheel connects to the Washington MERIT Registry

✓ Brightwheel automatically posts completed Physical and Intellectual Development course hours to the Washington MERIT Registry for eligible staff. When a staff member completes a course, the hours are recorded in their brightwheel profile and transmitted to the Washington MERIT Registry automatically — no manual data entry required.
Washington MERIT Registry →

Frequently asked questions

Is brightwheel Physical and Intellectual Development training accepted in Washington?
Yes. Brightwheel Professional Development is accepted for continuing education requirements in Washington. Courses are IACET‑accredited and cover Physical and Intellectual Development competencies recognized by the Washington DCYF.
How many CE hours does Washington require for childcare staff?
Washington requires all licensed childcare staff to complete 10 hours of annual continuing education.
Does brightwheel auto‑post Physical and Intellectual Development course hours to the Washington registry?
Yes. Brightwheel courses auto‑post completed hours directly to the Washington MERIT Registry. Staff add their registry ID once in their brightwheel Professional Development profile — every course completed after that is recorded automatically.
How do I get a certificate for a brightwheel Physical and Intellectual Development course?
Each brightwheel course includes a final assessment. Staff who score 80% or higher receive a certificate of completion that can be used for Washington licensing documentation and QRIS verification. Certificates are available to download from your brightwheel Professional Development profile at any time.
Does completing brightwheel’s Physical and Intellectual Development courses count toward a CDA credential?
Brightwheel courses are aligned with CDA II — Physical and Intellectual Development — of the CDA competency framework. However, earning a CDA credential requires additional components beyond course completion, including a Professional Portfolio, a formal observation, and an exam administered by the Council for Professional Recognition. Brightwheel courses provide the continuing education component of CDA preparation but are not a standalone pathway to CDA certification.

Other competency areas available in Washington

Meet Washington Physical and Intellectual Development training requirements with brightwheel

Brightwheel offers IACET‑accredited Physical and Intellectual Development courses accepted in Washington — with automatic tracking and Washington MERIT Registry auto‑posting built in.

View full course roster

Accreditation: Brightwheel is accredited by the International Accreditors for Continuing Education and Training (IACET) and offers IACET CEUs for its learning events that comply with the ANSI/IACET Continuing Education and Training Standard. IACET is recognized internationally as a standard development organization and accrediting body that promotes quality of continuing education and training.