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In the swim

    News
  • Wednesday, June 12, 2002
  • | Nursery World
It's not as hard as you think to organise an inclusive scheme - and children themselves are often the most creative at adapting activities, says Jane Muir Talking about the inclusive West Oxford Holiday Playscheme, which runs during the school summer holidays, Christina, aged 9, explains, 'We do games that everyone can play, you can use ordinary games and change the rules a bit so anybody can join in, you can make up some too.'

Allegations of inadequacy outrage nursery sector

    News
  • Wednesday, August 9, 2006
  • | Nursery World
Childcare organisations have reacted with dismay to comments from the Professional Association of Teachers (PAT) that staff in nurseries are in danger of creating 'the next generation of Vicky Pollards'. The National Day Nurseries Association said claims made by Deborah Lawson, the chair of PAT, that nursery staff were poor role models with inadequate language and social skills were 'insulting' and 'ridiculous'.

Two-year-olds - We can meet twos' needs, say schools

    News
  • Monday, February 10, 2014
  • | Nursery World
Some specialists have warned that schools will struggle to give two-year-olds sufficient support, but headteachers already caring for twos say they are well placed to succeed. By Gabriella Jozwiak

Money matters

    Other
  • Monday, March 10, 2014
  • | Nursery World
Children at Mulberry House School in West Hampstead set up their own bike and scooter wash as part of 'Money Day' to help them understand the value and use of money in daily life.

Portrait gallery

    News
  • Tuesday, June 11, 2002
  • | Nursery World

Children's great appreciation of their carers shone through in the National Childcare Month art competition run by Nursery World and the Daycare Trust

Staff and children

    News
  • Wednesday, October 16, 2002
  • | Nursery World
Staff and children at the Birrell Collection Nursery at Queen Margaret University College in Edinburgh keep seeing double, as there are three sets of twins in the nursery and one on the staff. Staff members Sheena and Sandra Simpson are pictured pairing up with Niamh and Patrick Ritchie (far left and far right), Rose and Olivia Hynd (centre), and Francis and Aidan Fraser (front).

New rights for fathers and adoptive parents

    News
  • Wednesday, June 5, 2002
  • | Nursery World
New rights for fathers and adoptive parents to paid time off, an extension of paid and unpaid leave for new mothers, and a right for the parents of young children to ask for flexible working conditions, are set out in the Employment Bill being debated in Northern Ireland. The Assembly's employment and learning minister, Carmel Hanna, said the world of work needed to react to the needs of the modern economy and of working parents. She said there would be costs to employers in setting up and administering new arrangements and in facilitating requests for flexible working. 'However, there will be advantages for employers too, with reduced recruitment and retraining costs,' she said.

Early years experience not essential

    News
  • Wednesday, June 5, 2002
  • | Nursery World
The new Scottish Commission for the Regulation of Care has been recruiting new officers - but has not specified that they should have any early years experience. A recent advertisement in The Scotsman specified that applicants should have 'extensive experience in a relevant occupational field such as education, social work or the health service', with no mention of early years.

Quote of the week

    News
  • Wednesday, August 7, 2002
  • | Nursery World
'People found it hard to retain a friendship with me after the allegations were made. Girls I trained with to become a nursery nurse couldn't bear to be my friend any more. My family suffered so much it can't be put into words.' Dawn Reed, on how the paedophile allegations have affected her life, The Guardian

Diet risk to babies of teen mothers

    News
  • Wednesday, May 7, 2003
  • | Nursery World
Many pregnant teenagers are putting their babies' health at risk because they cannot afford an adequate diet, a joint report by the Maternity Alliance and the Food Commission has claimed. The report, Good Enough to Eat?, published last week, found that two-thirds of pregnant teenagers living away from their family have a food budget of less than Pounds 20.25 per week - the estimated cost of a 'modest but adequate' diet - and that as money runs out they tend to eat less and fill up on cheap, unhealthy foods.

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