What California’s DRDP says about social-emotional development
California’s early learning framework, known as the Desired Results Developmental Profile (DRDP), is the official observation-based assessment tool used by licensed childcare and development programs across the state. Administered by the California Department of Education (CDE), the DRDP defines what healthy development looks like for children from birth through kindergarten entry — and social-emotional development sits at the core of the framework.
Under the DRDP, social-emotional development is organized into three primary measure areas: Self and Social Development, Relationships and Social Interactions, and Self-Regulation. These domains capture the range of competencies children build as they learn to understand themselves, form relationships with caregivers and peers, and regulate their emotions and behavior.
California requires all licensed childcare programs — including centers, family childcare homes, and Head Start programs — to observe and document children’s development across DRDP domains. These observations inform curriculum planning and are often tied to Quality Rating and Improvement System (QRIS) requirements under California’s Quality Counts California initiative.
Research consistently shows that strong social-emotional foundations in early childhood predict academic achievement, healthy relationships, and mental wellness across the lifespan. Children who enter kindergarten with solid social-emotional skills are significantly more likely to demonstrate grade-level reading proficiency by third grade.
Developmental milestones
Social-emotional 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 | Forming secure caregiver attachments; responding to facial expressions and tone of voice; beginning to recognize emotions in others; seeking comfort from familiar adults | Consistent responsive caregiving; narrating emotions aloud; maintaining predictable routines; co-regulation through physical closeness |
| Toddlers 18–36 months | Labeling basic emotions; beginning parallel play; testing independence; brief emotional outbursts as self-regulation develops; showing empathy toward distressed peers | Emotion coaching with simple language; offering limited choices to build autonomy; co-regulation strategies; simple picture books about feelings |
| Preschool 3–5 years | Cooperative play with peers; perspective-taking; following group rules; managing transitions; building friendships; identifying and expressing a wider range of emotions | Conflict resolution scripts; classroom jobs; dramatic play scenarios; friendship-building activities; peace corners for self-regulation; class meetings |
Curriculum alignment
How Experience Curriculum supports California’s DRDP social-emotional standards
Experience Curriculum is built around 35 research-based skills organized across 8 developmental domains — and social-emotional development is woven into every theme-based monthly kit. Rather than treating SEL as a separate lesson block, the curriculum integrates 2–3 skills from the social-emotional domain into each activity, reinforcing learning naturally across the day.
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.
SEL skills covered
- Identity of self in relation to others
- Recognition of ability and self-confidence
- Expression and regulation of emotion
- Empathy and social understanding
- Building and maintaining peer relationships
- Cooperation and conflict resolution
How it’s delivered
- Monthly kits with SEL activities embedded throughout
- Emotion cards, dramatic play props, and reflection tools
- Observation prompts tied to DRDP levels
- Family engagement take-homes for SEL at home
- Brightwheel digital documentation tied to CA DRDP indicators
- Teacher guides with scripted emotion-coaching language
Experience Curriculum’s social-emotional approach is grounded in attachment theory, Vygotsky’s Zone of Proximal Development, and evidence-based SEL frameworks from CASEL. An independent psychometric evaluation found the linked Experience Assessment exceeds standards for validity and reliability across all eight developmental domains, including social-emotional.
Skills spotlight
Key social-emotional skills in the 35-skill framework
Experience Curriculum’s 35-skill framework maps directly to the DRDP domains. Here are four social-emotional skills that feature prominently in every age-band kit.
Cooperation
Working alongside peers toward shared goals; taking turns; following group agreements. Embedded in dramatic play, group projects, and movement games.
Communication
Expressing needs, wants, and feelings through words and gestures. Reinforced through morning meetings, emotion vocabulary builders, and caregiver narration prompts.
Empathy
Recognizing and responding to the feelings of others. Taught through read-alouds, persona dolls, dramatic play scenarios, and teacher modeling.
Self-regulation
Managing emotions and behavior in challenging situations. Activities include calm-down corners, breathing exercises, and predictable classroom structures.
Implementation guidance
Practical tips for embedding SEL into your California program
1. Build predictable routines
Social-emotional development flourishes in environments where children know what to expect. California’s DRDP measures include self-regulation as a key domain — and predictable daily schedules are one of the most powerful evidence-based supports for self-regulation development. Structure your day with consistent transitions and signal them clearly in advance.
2. Use emotion vocabulary intentionally
Make emotion words part of your daily language, not just circle time. DRDP observers assess children’s ability to identify and label their own feelings — a skill that develops through repeated, naturalistic exposure. Experience Curriculum kits include emotion vocabulary cards and classroom displays designed for this purpose.
3. Document observations daily, not quarterly
DRDP documentation is most accurate when based on authentic, everyday observations rather than occasional assessments. Integrate brief observation moments into existing routines: during outdoor play, mealtimes, and transitions. Brightwheel’s mobile documentation makes this feasible for teachers managing groups.
4. Share SEL progress with families
Family engagement amplifies classroom SEL work significantly. When parents understand their child’s developmental stage and use consistent language at home, SEL growth accelerates. Experience Curriculum includes family take-home materials in every kit, and brightwheel enables real-time updates to families throughout the day.
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about California’s DRDP and SEL 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 Language & Literacy standards
California’s DRDP Language and Literacy domain and Experience Curriculum alignment
California DRDP resource guide
Official DRDP implementation resources from the California Department of Education