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Lasse Leponiemi

Chairman, The HundrED Foundation
first.last@hundred.org

Calm to Learn

place Russia

A play-based approach that helps young children regulate, trust, and learn

Calm to Learn is an early childhood educational approach for children aged 2–5 that prioritizes nervous system regulation before formal learning. Through play-based activities, movement, sensory experiences, and a non-coercive environment, the approach helps children reduce stress, build trust, and engage in learning at their own developmental pace. This creates inclusive, emotionally safe setting

Overview

Information on this page is provided by the innovator and has not been evaluated by HundrED.

Updated January 2026
Web presence

2019

Established

1

Countries
Students early
Target group
I hope to see early childhood education shift from pressure-driven instruction to emotionally safe, developmentally respectful learning. My goal is for calm, trust, and nervous system regulation to be recognized as essential foundations of learning, so that children can grow, communicate, and learn without fear or coercion.

About the innovation

Why did you create this innovation?

I created this innovation after many years of working with young children and observing how stress, pressure, and adult expectations interfere with natural development and learning.
In early childhood settings, I repeatedly saw that children aged 2–5 often struggle not because they lack ability, but because their nervous systems are overwhelmed. When children are anxious, separated too early from caregivers, or placed in rigid learning environments, learning becomes ineffective and sometimes harmful.
My background as a musician and educator helped me understand the role of the body, breathing, movement, and emotional safety in learning. I wanted to create an approach that first restores calm, trust, and a sense of safety, and only then introduces learning in ways that respect the child’s developmental stage.
Calm to Learn was created to support children, educators, and parents in building learning environments where emotional wellbeing is not a side goal, but the foundation of education.

What does your innovation look like in practice?

In practice, Calm to Learn is a play-based, child-centered approach designed for children aged 2–5. Learning takes place in a calm, flexible environment without rigid seating, forced participation, or pressure to perform.
Sessions include movement, rhythm, simple breathing activities, sensory play (such as sand, water, and tactile materials), storytelling, role play, and language-rich interaction. Children are free to observe, participate, or step back according to their emotional state.
Stress reduction always comes first. When a child feels safe and regulated, learning emerges naturally through play and imitation. Language development, social interaction, and self-regulation are supported without coercion.
Parents are actively involved through guidance and reflection, helping them understand how emotional safety, play, and realistic expectations support healthy development.

How has it been spreading?

Calm to Learn has so far developed through direct practice, professional reflection, and work with families in early childhood settings. Elements of the approach were applied in group environments and individual interactions with children and parents.
At this stage, the innovation is being formally articulated and prepared for broader professional dialogue and feedback through international platforms such as HundrED. The focus is currently on documentation, reflection, and adaptation rather than large-scale implementation.

How have you modified or added to your innovation?

Over time, the approach has been refined through observation, reflection, and dialogue with parents and educators. Greater emphasis has been placed on parental guidance, inclusion of children with different emotional and regulatory needs, and adaptation to cultural and contextual settings.

If I want to try it, what should I do?

Educators or parents interested in Calm to Learn can begin by observing children’s emotional states, reducing pressure, and introducing play-based, flexible learning moments focused on safety and trust.
Further guidance, materials, and structured descriptions of the approach are currently being developed and refined.

Implementation steps

Analyze the group before planning any activity
Before using the approach, the educator analyses the group:
– age range (1.5–3 or 3–6),
– developmental norms,
– individual differences,
– presence of children with sensory, emotional, or behavioral difficulties.
Activities are planned according to the real needs of the group, not according to a fixed script.
Define the educator’s role according to age
For children aged 1.5–3, the educator acts as a leader:
– models actions,
– speaks continuously,
– uses demonstration, imitation, and movement.
For children aged 3–6, the educator gradually becomes a dialogue partner:
– asks questions,
– waits for responses,
– encourages reflection while keeping structure.
Begin with free interaction with materials
At the first sessions, learning materials are introduced without formal explanation.
Children are allowed to explore, touch, manipulate, and observe.
The educator gently sets boundaries for safety and respect but does not rush into instruction.
Observe continuously and regulate group tension
Observation is a core method.
If tension, overstimulation, or emotional overload appears, the educator adjusts the activity:
– changes rhythm,
– introduces movement,
– simplifies tasks,
– switches focus.
Reducing stress is a priority before introducing learning goals.
Use movement and embodied activities as the foundation
Sessions actively include movement-based practices:
– logorhythmics,
– finger and puppet theatre,
– ball games,
– shadow theatre,
– water and sand play,
– vertical drawing,
– modeling and sculpting.
Children are allowed to move freely; passive observation is also acceptable
Maintain leadership and clear boundaries
The educator maintains leadership at all times:
– holds boundaries,
– prevents chaos,
– guides the process.
Freedom exists within structure. Activities do not turn into uncontrolled play.
Gradually integrate educational objectives
Learning goals (language, communication, attention, social skills) are gradually embedded into play.
The focus is on the process, not immediate results.
Forced outcomes are avoided to preserve motivation and emotional safety.
Involve parents as partners
Parents are informed and involved.
They are encouraged to ask questions, understand the logic of the approach, and support the process without pressuring the child for fast results.
Emphasize the role of the body in learning
The approach highlights the importance of gross motor development and body coordination.
A well-regulated body supports speech, attention, learning, and later academic skills.