What does it actually take for a child's body, social world, and moral character to develop together — and does the home environment play a role? This study follows 99 children aged 3–5 across two Montessori school branches in Hyderabad, using parent-reported home observation data to investigate whether gross motor engagement, social participation, and values modelling reinforce one another during the early childhood years. Rather than treating these as parallel outcomes measured in isolation, the research asks how they converge in real family contexts. The findings are striking in their consistency: children who spent more than an hour each day in intentional physical play showed not only stronger motor sensitivity ratings but also higher rates of independent conflict resolution and exposure to deliberate values-based parenting. Over nine in ten families reported modelling values through example rather than instruction — a practice that aligns with Montessori absorption theory and suggests that character formation, like motor skill, may be best supported through environment and demonstration rather than direct teaching. This paper contributes both a dataset and a replicable embedded observation methodology to the growing literature on holistic early childhood development.
Blue Blocks Micro Research Institute (Thu,) studied this question.