Found 20497 results for "Enabling Environments: Making Spaces ...?type=Feature?year_based=2008?pageSize=5?Tags/Name=Provision|Provision|Provision?orderBy=Relevance"
Early years practitioners are themselves part of the provision in any setting. Anne O'Connor outlines their role in and responsibility in promoting learning.
What is meant by continuous provision, and what does it require of early years practitioners? Anne O'Connor explains the key elements.
Don't forget about the role of physical activity in preparing children to read and write when planning provision for literacy development, both indoors and out, says Anne O'Connor.
Calculating and number play must be interactive if it is to trigger ideas and stimulate thinking. Anne O'Connor suggests ways of making the best use of mathematical resources.
Jane Drake, a partnership advisory teacher in Leeds and author of Planning Children's Play and Learning in the Foundation Stage and Organising Play in the Early Years (David Fulton) The layout of...
Check if all areas of provision in your setting promote creativity, by asking yourself: Does role play provision offer: * opportunities to observe adults undertaking home and community roles?
In providing resources for playful learning we need to remember the process in which they will be used, not just the outcome at the end, says Anne O'Connor.
Just what do practitioners enable when they provide the environments that attract children to play? Natalie Canning analyses crucial elements.
An activity based on the Noah's Ark story has provided a focused learning opportunity for girls and quieter children, reports Rebecca Fisk.
Special needs provision By Anne Longfield, chief executive of 4Children