Why the terminology is confusing
In Australia, the words used for early childhood education are genuinely confusing and used inconsistently. Different states use different terms; different centres call themselves different things. Here's the landscape:
- "Preschool": in NSW, typically a program for 3-to-5-year-olds, run during school-hour equivalents (usually 9am-3pm), with a strong educational focus.
- "Kindergarten": this is where it gets confusing. In NSW, Kindergarten is the first year of primary school. But in Victoria and some other states, "kinder" or "kindergarten" means what NSW calls "preschool." And many NSW centres use "Kindergarten" in their name even though they're really what NSW calls a preschool. That's us: we're Roseville Kindergarten but we're a preschool in the NSW sense.
- "Long day care" (LDC): full-day care, typically 7-8am to 5:30-6pm, for children from 0 to school age. Focus is on both care and education.
- "Daycare" or "child care": colloquial terms usually meaning long day care.
- "Family day care": small-scale care in an educator's own home, for up to 7 children.
- "Early learning centre (ELC)": modern branding, usually means long day care.
Preschool vs long day care: the real differences
Preschool (9am-3pm)
- Usually 3 to 5 year olds only
- Shorter day, aligned with school hours
- Closed during school holidays at some centres
- Educational focus with structured program
- Often cheaper per day
- Better for parents with flexible work or part-time roles
Long day care (7-8am to 5:30-6pm)
- Typically 0 to 5 year olds (some centres 0-2 only)
- Full working day
- Usually open 50-52 weeks per year
- Educational program plus care (meals, sleep, etc.)
- More expensive per day
- Better for parents working full-time
Centres that offer both
Increasingly common in Sydney, and especially on the North Shore, are centres that offer both preschool hours and long day care hours under one roof, with the same educators, same classrooms, same curriculum.
How this typically works:
- Children enrolled in preschool hours attend 9am-3pm.
- Children enrolled in long day care hours can attend earlier (e.g. from 8am) and stay later (until 5:30pm).
- Everyone does the same core educational program during the day.
- LDC children have extended outdoor play, afternoon tea at the centre, and indoor play before pickup.
This is how Roseville Kindergarten runs: we offer both preschool (9am-3pm) and long day care (8am-5:30pm) in the same centre, with the same educators. Families choose which option suits their working week, or mix and match across the week.
Mixing preschool and LDC days
Many working families use a hybrid approach: say, preschool hours on Tuesday and Thursday when a grandparent can do pickup, and LDC hours on Monday/Wednesday/Friday when both parents are working. This is completely normal and most centres will accommodate it.
Is the curriculum different?
At quality centres, no. Both preschool and long day care in Australia follow the Early Years Learning Framework (EYLF), a national framework that guides early childhood education from birth to age 5. Whether your child is in a preschool program or a long day care program, the educational approach is the same.
What can differ between centres:
- Pedagogical approach: play-based, Reggio Emilia-inspired, Montessori, Steiner. This varies by centre, not by "preschool vs LDC."
- Staff-to-child ratios: governed by national regulations.
- Program intensity: a shorter preschool day may have more "structured" educational time per hour, while LDC allows for more varied experiences across the day.
Does one prepare better for school?
This is a common question, does a "preschool" prepare children for Kindergarten better than "long day care"?
The short answer: quality matters far more than label. A quality long day care program at a good centre prepares children for school just as well as a quality preschool. What matters:
- Experienced educators who know your child
- A curriculum that develops social-emotional skills, curiosity, and language
- Plenty of play-based learning
- Small groups where each child is genuinely known
- Stable staff (low turnover)
- Good partnerships with families
These things can exist in either a preschool or a long day care, or, frustratingly, can be missing from either. Focus on the centre, not the label.
Community preschool vs private preschool/LDC
Another distinction worth understanding:
- Community preschools: not-for-profit, often subsidised by the NSW Government's Start Strong funding. Usually preschool hours only (no LDC). Fees tend to be lower, but waitlists are longer and days are limited.
- Private preschools / long day care: privately operated. May be independent (like us) or part of a corporate chain (Guardian, Goodstart, etc.). Full fee, subsidised through CCS. Usually more flexibility on hours and days.
Both can be excellent. Community preschools are a great option if the program fits your working arrangements; private centres offer more flexibility but usually at a higher net cost.
Which is right for your family?
Ask yourself:
- What are your actual working hours? If you and your partner both work 9am-5pm in the CBD, preschool hours (9-3) won't work without a nanny or family support for the gap.
- Do you need 50 weeks of care, or can you take time off during school holidays? Many community preschools close for school holidays. LDC centres typically stay open except for a week or two at Christmas.
- How important is continuity of educators? A centre that offers both preschool and LDC under one roof means your child has the same educators whether they stay the full day or leave at 3pm.
- What's your budget? Preschool hours are typically cheaper per day. But if you need the extra hours, paying for LDC may be cheaper than preschool + a nanny for the gap.
At Roseville Kindergarten
We offer both preschool hours (9am-3pm) and long day care hours (8am-5:30pm) for children aged 3 to 6. Same educators, same classrooms, same curriculum, same small-centre feel. You choose which option suits your family, and you can mix and match across the week.
Up to 40 children total, 2 to 5 days per week, with educators who have been with us for years. Director Anna has led the centre since 2009.
Book a tour to see how it works in practice, or call us on 02 9416 3002.