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What is it like to attend this early years setting?
The provision is good
Staff create a supportive and secure environment for the children. They take time to find out about the children and their families. They learn about what the children enjoy so that they can prepare to welcome them into the nursery.
For example, staff working with toddlers know they like to play with dolls. This preparation helps children to settle and be ready to play in the friendly and welcoming nursery. Staff know what helps to comfort each child if they become upset during the day.
Staff provide children with opportunities to develop their physical skills. Pre-school children use their fine muscle skills to squeez...e tweezers to pick up spaghetti. Toddlers enjoy using their mark making skills to colour Chinese balloons and spread glue and glitter onto their pictures.
Children of all ages play together outside and learn to climb, slide, and throw balls. Outdoors, staff remind children of some safety measures, for example, to sit down when they go down the slide. Indoors, children learn to control their bodies and to move in different ways as they join staff in music and movement sessions.
Staff help children to understand the rules to follow, such as when they patiently explain that children need to line up by the door to be counted before they go outside to play.
What does the early years setting do well and what does it need to do better?
There is a joint management team that shares responsibilities. They offer supervision opportunities to support staff's professional development and well-being.
Staff research subjects and then cascade what they have learned to their peers. This helps to improve their knowledge on topics, such as outdoor play, that contribute to improving outcomes for children. Staff report that they feel highly valued and part of a small, supportive team.
Staff help children to understand what is acceptable behaviour in nursery, to prepare them for life in wider society. When children very occasionally display unkind behaviour to their friends, staff address it sensitively. They talk to children about how their actions might affect the other children.
This has a positive impact on children, who learn how to cooperate and play with their friends.Staff provide children with a mix of adult-led activities and times when they can play independently. Overall, children are eager to join in with group activities, for example, most children enjoy listening to stories during a story-telling session.
However, occasionally, adult-guided experiences go on for too long. Some children are not able to remain focused and deeply engaged and they become restless and distracted, limiting their learning.Staff plan focused activities that support children to learn new skills, such as learning to use scissors to make a Chinese lantern.
Staff use hand-over-hand methods to help children learn how to use the scissors. However, at times staff overly direct during adult supported activities. For example, when some children want to just snip at the paper, staff are occasionally more interested in ensuring the children make a Chinese lantern.
This limits some children in developing their own creative thoughts and ideas, and practising using scissors.Staff support children's health and well-being. They work with parents to ensure that children's lunch boxes include healthy choices.
Staff sit alongside children as they eat their snack. They talk to them about oral health, and the importance of brushing their teeth and eating fruit and vegetables. Children enjoy being active in the fresh air and take part in regular music and movement activities led by staff.
Independence forms a major focus for the nursery curriculum. Staff motivate children to do things for themselves from a young age, for example, they encourage toddlers to wipe their nose, throw away their tissue, and wash their hands. Pre-school children pour drinks from a jug.
Staff support children to manage their self-care skills, for example, older children put on their own coats. Staff start younger children's zips and encourage them to finish pulling them up.Staff appreciate the importance of supporting children in developing their language and communication skills.
This is particularly relevant because a high number of children in the nursery speak English as an additional language. Staff model good language and often provide a running commentary on children's play. Staff support children to understand new words and instructions by speaking in their home language and reinforcing the words and sentences in English.
Safeguarding
The arrangements for safeguarding are effective.There is an open and positive culture around safeguarding that puts children's interests first.
What does the setting need to do to improve?
To further improve the quality of the early years provision, the provider should: develop the planning and implementation of adult-led activities to support all children to be focused and concentrate strengthen practice so that staff support children to develop their own creative thoughts and ideas.
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