“Variety of activities,
indoor and outdoor”
“Friendly, relaxed
atmosphere”
“Listen and act on concerns”
“It’s a lovely atmosphere
at nursery all the time”
“Team working (working like
a family)”
“………………. says she loves her
nursery”
“Very welcoming”
“Feel they are always one
step ahead”
“Get parent’s involved”
“Activities are unique each
week”
Suggestions/Improvements
Too much homework given – Activities given at
nursery to complete at home are always optional. They are given to extend
children’s knowledge and opportunities to learn further. They strengthen links
between staff and parents and nursery and home, encouraging children to talk
about nursery at home and vice versa. They also show our parents the kind of
activities children do in nursery sharing good practise and ways to support
children’s learning at home. Parents should not feel under pressure to carry
activities out if they are busy. These activities are not recorded anywhere if
they are not completed.
“It would be better to
concentrate more on learning numbers and letters, especially for pre-school
children”
“I would have liked my
child to have had a head start on phonics or name writing before school” – There is so much
involved in the process of children learning these skills before the end
product is visible. We do an awful lot of activities in nursery that develop
children’s reading, writing and numeracy skills. These are skills that need to
be developed they don’t learn them overnight. They are going on every day
through routine activities, daily play and adult lead activities. The provision
is pre-school, where children are
encouraged to develop skills across the seven areas of learning that they learn
BEFORE their learning experiences at school are taught. Below is a quote from
our Ofsted inspection report, one of the categories we received an Outstanding
grading in was our quality of teaching, learning and assessment. If anyone
would like to come in and learn about the different activities that we do to promote
these areas of learning they can come and have a chat with Amanda.
“Staff demonstrate expert
knowledge of how young children learn. They observe children carefully and are
very intuitive, knowing when and how to best support children's learning during
their play. Staff ask children a range of ambitious questions and allow them
sufficient time to think about different answers. Children are thoroughly challenged
through a highly effective balance of adult-led and child-initiated
experiences. They learn to count, compare and recognise their names frequently
during their play. Staff use a range of highly successful strategies to help
children who speak English as an additional language to make excellent
progress. Staff plan for experiences based on their assessment of children and
their acute knowledge of their interests and ways of learning. Assessments are
effectively shared with staff, parents and other professionals and children
make rapid progress from their starting points. “
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