Found 21998 results for "?tag=Activities?year_based=2000?Tags/Name=Provision|Business%7CManagement?orderBy=Relevance?ArticleTypes/Name=Knowledge%20Bank?pageSize=15"
The speech and language charity I CAN is changing its name to reach more of the almost one in five children in the UK who have challenges with talking and understanding words.
Microworlds 2000 is the new version of an old piece of Acorn software that encourages children to explore two colourful, interactive environments. Within each environment children progress from simple...
I am a nursery teacher in a small local authority-run primary school. I have the pleasure of working with a fully-qualified, very experienced and knowledgeable nursery nurse. We work as a team and...
The National Association of Nursery Nurses added its voice to the debate over job titles last week by announcing it was changing its name to the National Association of Early Years Professionals....
The provision of employer-supported childcare is critical to London's economic success, says a new report funded by the London Development Agency. Expanding the quantity and quality of London's...
In this true story, an experienced nanny tells Helen Kewley about how a false accusation blackened her reputation with employment agencies 'I couldn't believe what had just happened to me. As I sat in...
The nursery group Imagine Co-operative Childcare is changing its name to The Co-operative Childcare to reinforce its commitment to the co-operative movement and its ethics and values.
A Dublin-based nursery chain has opened three new settings in business parks, underlining its strategy of linking expansion of childcare provision to the city's booming commercial sector. Giraffe...
Celebrity culture will have attracted many readers to the headlines in national newspapers this month about Zoe Ball's nanny being killed tragically after a car crash. It turned out that the 'nanny',...
Nine nurseries have been ‘named and shamed’ on the latest minimum wage offenders list. How did they get there, and how easy was it to fall foul of the rules? Ruth Stokes reports