What California’s DRDP says about approaches to learning
California’s Desired Results Developmental Profile (DRDP) includes Approaches to Learning as a distinct and foundational domain — recognizing that how children engage with learning is as important as what they learn. Administered by the California Department of Education, the DRDP’s Approaches to Learning domain captures the dispositions and learning behaviors that enable children to benefit from educational experiences across all other developmental areas.
Under the DRDP, Approaches to Learning is organized into measures that assess Initiative and Curiosity (child’s drive to explore, question, and investigate), Attentiveness and Persistence (ability to focus on and sustain engagement with tasks), Cooperation and Responsibility (engagement with group learning contexts), and Creativity in Learning (flexible and imaginative approaches to problems).
California requires all licensed childcare programs to document children’s Approaches to Learning through DRDP observation records. This domain is uniquely valuable for QRIS documentation because it captures the quality of children’s engagement — not just their skill acquisition — and directly reflects the quality of the learning environment and the responsiveness of educators.
Approaches to Learning may be the most predictive domain for long-term academic success. Research from the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and the Head Start Research and Evaluation Project shows that children’s curiosity, persistence, and attentiveness at kindergarten entry predict academic achievement at least as strongly as specific academic skills. These dispositions are developed — not innate — and are highly responsive to the quality of early childhood environments.
Developmental milestones
Approaches to learning milestones by age group
Understanding where children are developmentally helps educators plan meaningful activities and document DRDP progress accurately. These milestones align with California’s DRDP levels and nationally recognized frameworks including NAEYC’s Developmentally Appropriate Practice and the CDC’s Milestone Moments.
| Age group | Key DRDP milestones | What educators can do |
|---|---|---|
| Infants Birth–18 months | Sustained attention on interesting objects and people; repeating actions to explore effects; beginning goal-directed behavior; expressing interest and preference; imitating caregivers to learn | Follow infant’s lead and attention; provide interesting objects that invite repeated exploration; narrate what infants are attending to; support sustained play without interruption |
| Toddlers 18–36 months | Initiating self-chosen activities; returning to preferred activities over multiple days; beginning to express plans; showing frustration but continuing to try; parallel play with growing interest in peers’ activities | Offer choice in activities; allow extended time for self-chosen projects; validate persistence; provide open-ended materials that invite repeated and extended engagement |
| Preschool 3–5 years | Setting goals and pursuing them across multiple sessions; seeking information to solve problems; flexible thinking when initial approaches fail; sustained collaborative projects; reflecting on their own learning | Long-cycle projects across multiple days; problem-solving provocations; reflection conversations; learning documentation walls; flexible scheduling to allow sustained engagement |
Curriculum alignment
How Experience Curriculum supports California’s DRDP Approaches to Learning standards
Experience Curriculum is designed to develop strong Approaches to Learning through its entire structure — not through isolated activities. The monthly theme format creates sustained, deepening engagement over four weeks, giving children the extended time needed to develop genuine curiosity, persistence, and initiative. Each kit is designed with open-ended questions, provocation-based activities, and multi-day projects that build the learning dispositions DRDP measures assess.
Every Experience Curriculum kit ships with a verified alignment to California’s DRDP. The downloadable California Alignment PDF maps each curriculum activity and skill to the specific DRDP measure and developmental level it targets — saving teachers significant documentation time.
Approaches to Learning skills covered
- Curiosity and initiative in learning
- Attention and persistence on tasks
- Flexibility and creative problem-solving
- Cooperation in group learning contexts
- Reflection on learning processes
- Independence and self-directed learning
How it’s delivered
- Monthly kits designed for 4-week sustained engagement
- Open-ended provocation activities that invite extended exploration
- Problem-solving challenges embedded in every theme
- Learning documentation templates for DRDP observations
- Brightwheel digital documentation tied to CA DRDP Approaches to Learning measures
- Family connection activities to extend learning dispositions at home
Experience Curriculum’s Approaches to Learning design draws on Laevers’ Experiential Education model (involvement and well-being), Dweck’s growth mindset research, and Zimmerman’s self-regulated learning framework. An independent psychometric evaluation found the linked Experience Assessment exceeds standards for validity and reliability across all eight developmental domains, including Approaches to Learning.
Skills spotlight
Key approaches to learning skills in the 35-skill framework
Experience Curriculum’s 35-skill framework maps directly to the DRDP domains. Here are four skills that feature prominently in every age-band kit.
Curiosity
Intrinsic motivation to explore, question, and investigate. Nurtured through open-ended materials, wonder-inducing environments, and educators who honor children’s questions and follow their investigative leads.
Persistence
Continuing to engage with challenging tasks even when frustrated. Developed through appropriate challenges, growth mindset language from educators, and structured time for sustained engagement.
Initiative
Self-starting and self-directed engagement with the environment. Supported through choice-rich schedules, open-ended learning centers, and responsive educators who follow children’s leads.
Flexibility
Adjusting approaches when initial strategies don’t work; trying new solutions. Built through problem-solving provocations, collaborative challenges, and adult modeling of flexible thinking.
Implementation guidance
Practical tips for embedding approaches to learning into your California program
1. Protect time for sustained, self-directed engagement
California’s DRDP Approaches to Learning measures assess children’s ability to initiate, sustain, and return to activities over time — behaviors that require generous, uninterrupted play time. Programs that offer at least 45–60 minutes of uninterrupted choice time daily generate far richer DRDP Approaches to Learning documentation than programs with highly fragmented schedules.
2. Use growth mindset language intentionally
How educators respond to children’s struggles and successes shapes learning dispositions profoundly. Replace “Good job!” with specific process praise: “I noticed you kept trying even when it was hard — that’s how you get better at things.” This directly supports the persistence and resilience California’s DRDP Approaches to Learning domain measures.
3. Design for long-cycle projects
Extended projects — multi-day or multi-week investigations of a question or topic — are the richest context for developing and documenting Approaches to Learning competencies. When children return to the same project across multiple sessions, they naturally demonstrate initiative, persistence, and flexible problem-solving. Experience Curriculum’s 4-week themes are designed to support exactly this kind of sustained engagement.
4. Make learning processes visible
Documentation walls that capture children’s questions, plans, attempts, and discoveries make the learning process visible — to children, families, and DRDP observers. When children see their own learning documented and celebrated, their metacognitive awareness grows, further strengthening Approaches to Learning competencies.
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about California’s DRDP and approaches to learning curriculum
Related resources
California DRDP alignment PDF
Full mapping of Experience Curriculum to California’s DRDP framework across all domains
California early learning standards
Overview of California’s DRDP framework and all 8 domain alignments
CA Social-Emotional standards
California’s DRDP Social-Emotional domain and Experience Curriculum alignment
CA Science standards
California’s DRDP Science domain and Experience Curriculum alignment
California DRDP resource guide
Official DRDP implementation resources from the California Department of Education