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Children 'not fed enough'

A Banbury pre-school has been criticised for failing to provide enough food for the children in its care.

Hill View Pre-School, in Hill View Crescent, has been issued with a notice to improve following a highly critical report by Ofsted inspectors.

As well as failing to meet legal requirements on safeguarding, the pre-school was told it did not meet the individual needs of children in terms of food provided.

Inspector Maxine Coulson said: “Children are not supplied with sufficient food for their needs and some children are left still asking for more, while other children do not eat anything at all due to the limited choices offered.”

Nursery manager Christine Sarney said staff had been surprised by the judgement.

She said: “The children come for three-hour sessions and we would always give them a choice of two things.

“On the day of the inspection we had one little boy who would not eat anything and the inspector said we should have offered something else to him.

“We have taken action and upped it to three items – we have fruit, vegetables and a carbohydrate.”

A total of 46 children attend the pre-school, which is open Mondays to Fridays 8.30am to 11.30am and 12.15pm to 3.15pm.

Mrs Sarney said: “You always get children that would eat all morning if you let them and those that don’t want to eat. It is only a snack we have to offer.”

The pre-school was also told it had to make sure at least one person with a paediatric first aid certificate was on the premises at all times, put in place an effective behaviour management policy, and improve risk assessment records.

Mrs Sarney said a part-time member of staff who held a first aid certificate had been made full-time, and other staff were receiving training.

She added: “The behaviour policy management we had was really just not good enough for Ofsted so we have redone it with the committee, and that’s in place now.”

Parents have been informed of the judgement and invited to spend a session at the pre-school.

She said: “We would like to reassure parents our practice is good.”

Comments(4)

xjohnx says...
5:58pm Fri 10 Feb 12

Is this what used to be an infants school. Is this a nursary school? If neither, what does 'pre-school' mean please? If for only three hours a day, then why the food fuss? Surely the children have been weaned?

Dilligaf2010 says...
6:32pm Fri 10 Feb 12

xjohnx wrote:
Is this what used to be an infants school. Is this a nursary school? If neither, what does 'pre-school' mean please? If for only three hours a day, then why the food fuss? Surely the children have been weaned?
I think it's another term for crèche but I may be wrong, I believe it's pre-nursery.

Tom Cranmer says...
9:11pm Fri 10 Feb 12

A pre-school is a nursery. I'm surprised the article focuses on the food element when they failed on safeguarding and first aid which I would think were far more serious issues than a lack of choice of snacks; these can quite literally involve life or death decisions.

Kropotkin says...
2:32pm Sun 12 Feb 12

And if the little chap had turned down the third choice would the nursery school / pre-school still be castigated by Ofsted for not offering him a fourth choice, ad infinitum? How many choices must be offered? Honestly, he isn't a hamster ; he's a human being and being told these are the two choices for lunch and the third choice is nothing isn't going to kill him. He'll learn about making choices and dealing with situations that are not exactly as he would wish. A useful lesson which the official policy of molly-coddling young people will not teach anyone. And then they are surprised when a bunch of spoilt teenagers riot....

Otherwise if you look at this report as reported it is all about policies. The purpose is to cover Ofsted.
A policy on First Aid, for example, does not ensure that the First Aider actually knows what to do. You can't bring young people up by policies.

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