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    News
  • Wednesday, May 29, 2002
  • | Nursery World
Staff work jointly with parents in assessing a child's learning at this early years centre, says Julian Grenier Lynn Kennington, the head of Gamesley Pre-School Centre in North Derbyshire, is forthright about her priorities. 'Parents are at the forefront of our thinking. They are the child's first educators,' she states. 'We are here as a resource for the community, for the child and the family.'

A positive future

    News
  • Wednesday, December 20, 2006
  • | Nursery World
New hopes are held out for children who suffer from this life-threatening condition. Melanie Defries explains what they need Cystic fibrosis came to prominent public attention recently when it was revealed by Chancellor Gordon Brown that his four-month-old son James Fraser had been diagnosed with the hereditary disease. He said that he and his wife Sarah were positive about their son's future and optimistic about new treatments, and they were touched by the many messages of support received.

More health visitors needed

    News
  • Wednesday, November 7, 2007
  • | Nursery World
Up to 4,000 more full-time health visitors are needed across England to provide intensive support for 120,000 vulnerable families, says a leading trade union.

A base that reaches into the heart of the community

    News
  • Wednesday, May 29, 2002
  • | Nursery World
The ACE Centre is the base for professionals from many different services who are working together. Their common agenda is to find out what people need and then provide it. It is a kind of working which is still exploratory, and is sometimes challenging. 'We are all committed and caring professionals at the centre,' says Clempson, 'but you never get to the point where you've "cracked it". This work isn't just about words on bits of paper. We have found that when people are working together for the first time, their own needs have to be met even as we are working to meet the needs of the people we serve.'

Animal welfare: Hop to it!

    News
  • Tuesday, May 28, 2002
  • | Nursery World
There are many ways for young children to learn respect and appreciation for animals without keeping live ones in their school or nursery, as Marie Charlton explains

London Borough of Newham's Children's Information Service

    News
  • Wednesday, March 23, 2005
  • | Nursery World
* The London Borough of Newham's Children's Information Service also received the National Quality Award at a ceremony held at the Guildhall in the City of London on 14 February. The award was presented by Naomi Eisenstadt, director of the Sure Start Unit at the Department for Education and Skills.

Campaign demands strategy change

    News
  • Tuesday, May 28, 2002
  • | Nursery World
The Pre-school Learning Alliance has launched a two-year campaign to pressure the Government into rethinking its National Childcare Strategy.

Settings well organised while QA boosts ratings

    News
  • Tuesday, August 26, 2008
  • | Nursery World
Ofsted's third and final review from the three-year cycle of inspections focuses on how early years and childcare providers organise, lead and manage settings to promote positive outcomes for children.

The poison grant

    News
  • Wednesday, December 13, 2006
  • | Nursery World
I noted in Beverley Hughes' 'Analysis' article (Nursery World, 23 November) how carefully she avoided the main issue - in certain settings, accepting the education grant money can put the setting out of business. My company has given advice to nurseries in respect of policies and procedures, National Standards, staffing and employment legislation since 1990. We have recently been consulted by a number of nurseries on the situation created by the new ruling.

Storing it up

    News
  • Wednesday, May 18, 2005
  • | Nursery World
Get the best out of your outdoor equipment storage facilities with this expert advice from Jan White, senior early years development officer at Learning through Landscapes Every early years practitioner knows that the storage and organisation of equipment and resources is a key issue in outdoor provision. Setting out and clearing away each day can be time-consuming and require considerable effort. If equipment is difficult to get out and use, it is not likely to be used regularly.

NEG protesters meet with new Tory

    News
  • Wednesday, December 6, 2006
  • | Nursery World
Campaigners against the revised funding rules for the nursery education grant met with the new shadow minister for education at the House of Commons last week (22 November) to discuss their concerns. Private and voluntary provi-ders from the Save Our Nurseries group were invited to meet Anne McIntosh, who has replaced Maria Miller in the shadow cabinet reshuffle and had previously lent her support to the group.

Work Matters: To the top

    Features
  • Tuesday, August 26, 2008
  • | Nursery World
Nursery staff who have made great progress in their settings tell Karen Faux about the policies that have boosted their careers.

Learning from Sure Start: working with young children and their families

    News
  • Wednesday, November 2, 2005
  • | Nursery World
* A new book, Learning from Sure Start: working with young children and their families, edited by Jo Weinberger, Caroline Pickstone and Peter Hannon, takes an in-depth look at the Sure Start initiative. It evaluates the methods used in Sure Start programmes, identifies successes and indicates any lessons to be learned. The book is published by Oxford University Press and costs 18.99. To order a copy visit www.openup.co.uk or call 01628 502 700.

Media watch

    News
  • Wednesday, December 6, 2006
  • | Nursery World
Putting a 'calypso' spin on the traditional Christmas party and nativity play has not gone down well with Christian parents at Highview Primary School in Surrey, according to The Sun. The headteacher's plan to have children sing a reggae-themed 'Twelve Days of Christmas' and to perform 'Away in a Manger' in sign language has prompted more than 100 parents to ban their children from attending the show. The Metro reported that the country's youngest qualified pub barman is 12-year-old Chris Hardacre, who came top of the class in a recent licence exam. Chris, whose father Dave runs The Star at Barnby Dun near Doncaster, Yorkshire, is looking forward to following in the family trade once he is legally old enough..

Within reach

    News
  • Wednesday, November 2, 2005
  • | Nursery World
The children's centre programme is an ambitious project to integrate services for under-fives. In the run-up to phase 2, is it still on track? Nothing illustrates more graphically the Government's grand design to integrate and mainstream services for children from birth to five years old and their families, first within deprived areas and then in every community in the country, than its plan to create 3,500 children's centres by 2010.

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