Safeguarding met Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care source PDF ↗ provider page on ofsted.gov.uk ↗

Grades by area

Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines

Strong standard
Leaders implement incredibly secure routines from the baby room through to the pre-school room. They establish a culture of respect and form lovely relationships with children. The youngest babies benefit from bespoke and personalised routines, mirroring what happens at home. They transition to the nursery routine slowly as they progress through the rooms. Children know the golden rules, such as 'no running' inside, and parents and carers comment that their children even implement these when at home. Expectations for positive behaviour start in the baby room, with staff modelling how to use resources correctly. Staff consider the unique needs of children with special educational needs and/or disabilities when sharing their expectations. They recognise that some children need more support and offer this with sensitive and gentle encouragement. Children behave beautifully and form respectful relationships with staff and their friends. Leaders place a high priority on punctuality and monitor patterns of attendance consistently. They work closely with the local authority to ensure that non-attendance is reported and that children are accessing their full entitlement. For groups of children that leaders have identified as vulnerable, the company provides funded places during the school holidays to ensure continuity of these children's care and learning.

Achievement

Expected standard
Overall, children achieve well across the areas of learning. They are chatty, confident and motivated to learn. Children skilfully count from one to 10, sing number rhymes and use prepositional language. They talk about past activities, such as going on a pretend bear hunt, and discuss the sensory experiences they enjoyed. Children have effective recall and memory. Children are confident communicators. Younger children name a range of animals, foods and characters from books. Older children hold lengthy back-and-forth conversations and use words such as 'volcano', when they observe water overflowing from a vessel. Children enjoy reading with staff. They are eager to join in with parts of the story they remember and share their views on what is happening in the pictures. Babies learn to move from playing alongside one another to playing with their friends in activities, such as 'row, row, row the boat'. All children, including those with special educational needs and/or disabilities, are developing an array of new skills and are all well prepared for their next stage of learning.

Children's welfare and wellbeing

Expected standard
The key-person system is typically well established. Staff collect a wealth of pertinent information to find out about children's needs when they first start. Key persons are assigned based on shift patterns and children's attendance to ensure key staff can complete all care routines, such as feeding, changing and sleep routines. This promotes children's emotional wellbeing and helps them to form deep bonds with staff and feel secure at nursery. Staff working with older children help them to recognise and express how they are feeling. For instance, some children struggle when it is time to share the resources. Staff encourage children to express this frustration in words and request a little longer to finish their activity. This helps children to learn the correct words to describe their feelings. Leaders recognise that the local area has a high number of children with oral tooth decay. With this in mind, they have adapted the nursery's menus to reduce sugar content. Furthermore, they have introduced a toothbrushing scheme to teach children about the importance of healthy food choices and regular toothbrushing. Effective hygiene routines are well embedded across the nursery. Children learn the correct way to wash their hands from staff modelling the routine. This promotes children's overall positive health and wellbeing.

Curriculum and teaching

Expected standard
Leaders have made improvements to the quality of the curriculum since the last inspection. They consider the range of children that attend and design the curriculum with a focus on personal, social and emotional development to secure the foundations for future learning. Staff support children's communication and language and mathematical development particularly well. They narrate to babies as they play and immerse toddlers in an environment rich in language. Staff model mathematical language, such as 'full', 'empty', 'float' and 'sink', which they encourage children to copy. They support children with special educational needs and/or disabilities by using visual prompts and objects of reference to enhance their understanding. This helps all children to communicate in their preferred way. Overall, the curriculum is typically taught well. Most staff have an effective understanding of the curriculum and, at times, some teaching is excellent. While there are no significant gaps in teaching, it is clear there are stronger and more confident members of staff who implement the curriculum more successfully than others. For example, when teaching children to use scissors, some staff do not consistently support children to hold them correctly. Furthermore, at times, some staff do not fully implement the intentions for the activities they are providing. As such, this hinders the new skills children are developing.

Inclusion

Expected standard
Leaders have secure procedures in place for identifying and supporting children with special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND) and those who face other barriers to their learning. Staff are knowledgeable and have received appropriate training to help them fulfil their roles in supporting children with SEND. They implement individual support packages, including targets set by outside agencies, and monitor these closely to measure the impact. Additional funding, such as early years pupil premium and inclusion funding, is used wisely to support the children it is allocated to. This helps to ensure that children with SEND make progress from their individual starting points. Leaders and staff are proactive in finding out about children's unique needs before they start. They ensure that they have sufficient information about children and an appropriate care package in place before they start. Staff work closely with specialist teachers and professionals to support children's feeding and to undertake additional training specific to children's needs. This ensures that children are safe and well supported from day one.

Leadership and governance

Expected standard
Leaders are passionate and have worked diligently since the last inspection to make positive changes to the nursery. They have an understanding of the strengths and weaknesses and what they want to improve next. Senior leaders play a significant role in the nursery. They provide a wealth of support to the staff team, ensuring their workload is manageable. Leaders make strategic decisions that are in the best interests of children. For instance, in anticipation of receiving additional funding, relief staff have been sought to allow key persons to provide one-to-one support for children with special educational needs and/or disabilities. This prevents any delays in children accessing the support they need. Since the last inspection, leaders have implemented new arrangements for staff supervision. They observe the rooms holistically and provide training to help staff understand children's different ages and stages of development. This is working well and staff's confidence in delivering the curriculum is increasing. However, coaching and training do not yet focus precisely on identifying and addressing staff's individual areas for improvement. Some staff do not have targets for improvement and for those who do, they are not monitored frequently enough to measure the impact. Because of this, there are some minor inconsistencies in the quality of teaching across the team.

What it's like to be a child at this setting

Children are happy and settled and have a lovely experience at the nursery. They attend regularly and staff get to know them well, forming positive bonds with the whole family. Staff are attentive to children's needs and respond quickly, for instance when babies are tired. Their warm and affectionate interactions help babies to drift off to sleep very quickly. This helps babies to feel safe and secure at nursery. The curriculum is generally well implemented, and children make effective progress from their individual starting points. Children with special educational needs and/or disabilities seamlessly access the curriculum. Staff have a sound understanding of children's individual needs and adapt their teaching accordingly. Toddlers have a wide vocabulary for their age, copying words such as 'delicious' and using it in context to describe their food. Children of all ages spend a lot of time in the role-play areas. They play cooperatively with their friends, dressing up and modelling scenes they are familiar with, such as feeding the dolls. Children show good levels of independence from an early age. The youngest babies learn to use a spoon and feed themselves. As children progress through the rooms, they serve their own food, pour drinks and tend to their own personal care. Children are confident and eager learners. Staff talk to children a lot and value their thoughts and opinions. They ask children what they have enjoyed about the day. Staff encourage children to express their different feelings and emotions. Even the youngest children start to form friendships. For instance, babies excitedly welcome their friends as they come outside to play, gently patting them on the back to guide them to the play area. Staff's consistent use of positive praise and encouragement helps to boost children's self-esteem.

Next steps

Leaders should build on the arrangements for supervision and training to help staff strengthen their individual skills and knowledge.

About this inspection

The inspectors spoke with leaders, staff, parents, carers and children during the inspection. We carried out this inspection under sections 49 and 50 of the Childcare Act 2006 on the quality and standards of provision that is registered on the Early Years Register. The registered person must ensure that this provision complies with the statutory framework for children's learning, development and care, known as the early years foundation stage.

About this setting

URN
309355
Address
Ashton Park Pedders Lane Ashton-on-Ribble Preston PR2 1HL
Type
Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care
Registration date
11/08/1994
Registered person
Busy Bees Nurseries Limited
Register(s)
EYR, CCR, VCR
Operating hours
Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 07:30 - 18:00
Local authority
Lancashire

Facts and figures

Age range at inspection
0 to 4
Total places
161

Data from 17 February 2026

Raw extracted PDF text
Busy Bees Day Nursery at Preston Ashton House
Unique reference number (URN): 309355
Address: Ashton Park, Pedders Lane, Ashton-on-Ribble, Preston, PR2 1HL
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registered with Ofsted: 11/08/1994
Registers: EYR, CCR, VCR
Registered person: Busy Bees Nurseries Limited
Inspection report: 17 February 2026
Exceptional
Strong standard
Expected standard
Needs attention
Urgent improvement
Safeguarding standards met
The safeguarding standards are met. This means that leaders and/or those responsible for
governance and oversight fulfil their specific responsibilities and have established an open
culture in which safeguarding is everyone's responsibility and concerns are actively
identified, acted upon and managed. As a result, children are made safer and feel safe.
How we evaluate safeguarding
When we inspect settings for safeguarding, they can have the following outcomes:
Met: The setting has an open and positive culture of safeguarding.
Not met: The setting has not created an open and positive culture of safeguarding. Not all
legal requirements are met.

Strong standard
Expected standard
Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines Strong standard
Leaders implement incredibly secure routines from the baby room through to the pre-school
room. They establish a culture of respect and form lovely relationships with children. The
youngest babies benefit from bespoke and personalised routines, mirroring what happens at
home. They transition to the nursery routine slowly as they progress through the rooms.
Children know the golden rules, such as 'no running' inside, and parents and carers
comment that their children even implement these when at home.
Expectations for positive behaviour start in the baby room, with staff modelling how to use
resources correctly. Staff consider the unique needs of children with special educational
needs and/or disabilities when sharing their expectations. They recognise that some
children need more support and offer this with sensitive and gentle encouragement.
Children behave beautifully and form respectful relationships with staff and their friends.
Leaders place a high priority on punctuality and monitor patterns of attendance consistently.
They work closely with the local authority to ensure that non-attendance is reported and that
children are accessing their full entitlement. For groups of children that leaders have
identified as vulnerable, the company provides funded places during the school holidays to
ensure continuity of these children's care and learning.
Achievement Expected standard
Overall, children achieve well across the areas of learning. They are chatty, confident and
motivated to learn. Children skilfully count from one to 10, sing number rhymes and use
prepositional language. They talk about past activities, such as going on a pretend bear
hunt, and discuss the sensory experiences they enjoyed. Children have effective recall and
memory.
Children are confident communicators. Younger children name a range of animals, foods
and characters from books. Older children hold lengthy back-and-forth conversations and
use words such as 'volcano', when they observe water overflowing from a vessel. Children
enjoy reading with staff. They are eager to join in with parts of the story they remember and
share their views on what is happening in the pictures. Babies learn to move from playing
alongside one another to playing with their friends in activities, such as 'row, row, row the
boat'. All children, including those with special educational needs and/or disabilities, are
developing an array of new skills and are all well prepared for their next stage of learning.

Children's welfare and wellbeing Expected standard
The key-person system is typically well established. Staff collect a wealth of pertinent
information to find out about children's needs when they first start. Key persons are
assigned based on shift patterns and children's attendance to ensure key staff can complete
all care routines, such as feeding, changing and sleep routines. This promotes children's
emotional wellbeing and helps them to form deep bonds with staff and feel secure at
nursery.
Staff working with older children help them to recognise and express how they are feeling.
For instance, some children struggle when it is time to share the resources. Staff encourage
children to express this frustration in words and request a little longer to finish their activity.
This helps children to learn the correct words to describe their feelings.
Leaders recognise that the local area has a high number of children with oral tooth decay.
With this in mind, they have adapted the nursery's menus to reduce sugar content.
Furthermore, they have introduced a toothbrushing scheme to teach children about the
importance of healthy food choices and regular toothbrushing. Effective hygiene routines are
well embedded across the nursery. Children learn the correct way to wash their hands from
staff modelling the routine. This promotes children's overall positive health and wellbeing.
Curriculum and teaching Expected standard
Leaders have made improvements to the quality of the curriculum since the last inspection.
They consider the range of children that attend and design the curriculum with a focus on
personal, social and emotional development to secure the foundations for future learning.
Staff support children's communication and language and mathematical development
particularly well. They narrate to babies as they play and immerse toddlers in an
environment rich in language. Staff model mathematical language, such as 'full', 'empty',
'float' and 'sink', which they encourage children to copy. They support children with special
educational needs and/or disabilities by using visual prompts and objects of reference to
enhance their understanding. This helps all children to communicate in their preferred way.
Overall, the curriculum is typically taught well. Most staff have an effective understanding of
the curriculum and, at times, some teaching is excellent. While there are no significant gaps
in teaching, it is clear there are stronger and more confident members of staff who
implement the curriculum more successfully than others. For example, when teaching
children to use scissors, some staff do not consistently support children to hold them
correctly. Furthermore, at times, some staff do not fully implement the intentions for the
activities they are providing. As such, this hinders the new skills children are developing.
Inclusion Expected standard
Leaders have secure procedures in place for identifying and supporting children with special
educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND) and those who face other barriers to their
learning. Staff are knowledgeable and have received appropriate training to help them fulfil
their roles in supporting children with SEND. They implement individual support packages,
including targets set by outside agencies, and monitor these closely to measure the impact.

Additional funding, such as early years pupil premium and inclusion funding, is used wisely
to support the children it is allocated to. This helps to ensure that children with SEND make
progress from their individual starting points.
Leaders and staff are proactive in finding out about children's unique needs before they
start. They ensure that they have sufficient information about children and an appropriate
care package in place before they start. Staff work closely with specialist teachers and
professionals to support children's feeding and to undertake additional training specific to
children's needs. This ensures that children are safe and well supported from day one.
Leadership and governance Expected standard
Leaders are passionate and have worked diligently since the last inspection to make
positive changes to the nursery. They have an understanding of the strengths and
weaknesses and what they want to improve next. Senior leaders play a significant role in the
nursery. They provide a wealth of support to the staff team, ensuring their workload is
manageable. Leaders make strategic decisions that are in the best interests of children. For
instance, in anticipation of receiving additional funding, relief staff have been sought to allow
key persons to provide one-to-one support for children with special educational needs
and/or disabilities. This prevents any delays in children accessing the support they need.
Since the last inspection, leaders have implemented new arrangements for staff supervision.
They observe the rooms holistically and provide training to help staff understand children's
different ages and stages of development. This is working well and staff's confidence in
delivering the curriculum is increasing. However, coaching and training do not yet focus
precisely on identifying and addressing staff's individual areas for improvement. Some staff
do not have targets for improvement and for those who do, they are not monitored
frequently enough to measure the impact. Because of this, there are some minor
inconsistencies in the quality of teaching across the team.
Compulsory Childcare Register requirements
This setting has met the requirements of the compulsory part of the Childcare Register.
How we check if a provider meets the requirements of the Compulsory Childcare
Register
When we check if settings meet the Compulsory Childcare Register requirements, they can
have the following outcomes:
Met
Not met

Voluntary Childcare Register requirements
This setting has met the requirements of the voluntary part of Childcare Register.
How we check if a provider meets the requirements of the Voluntary Childcare
Register
When we check if settings meet the Voluntary Childcare Register requirements, they can
have the following outcomes:
Met
Not met
What it's like to be a child at this setting
Children are happy and settled and have a lovely experience at the nursery. They attend
regularly and staff get to know them well, forming positive bonds with the whole family. Staff
are attentive to children's needs and respond quickly, for instance when babies are tired.
Their warm and affectionate interactions help babies to drift off to sleep very quickly. This
helps babies to feel safe and secure at nursery.
The curriculum is generally well implemented, and children make effective progress from
their individual starting points. Children with special educational needs and/or disabilities
seamlessly access the curriculum. Staff have a sound understanding of children's individual
needs and adapt their teaching accordingly. Toddlers have a wide vocabulary for their age,
copying words such as 'delicious' and using it in context to describe their food. Children of
all ages spend a lot of time in the role-play areas. They play cooperatively with their friends,
dressing up and modelling scenes they are familiar with, such as feeding the dolls. Children
show good levels of independence from an early age. The youngest babies learn to use a
spoon and feed themselves. As children progress through the rooms, they serve their own
food, pour drinks and tend to their own personal care. Children are confident and eager
learners.
Staff talk to children a lot and value their thoughts and opinions. They ask children what they
have enjoyed about the day. Staff encourage children to express their different feelings and
emotions. Even the youngest children start to form friendships. For instance, babies
excitedly welcome their friends as they come outside to play, gently patting them on the
back to guide them to the play area. Staff's consistent use of positive praise and
encouragement helps to boost children's self-esteem.

Inspectors:
Kayte Farrell
Katie Sparrow
About this setting
Unique reference number (URN): 309355
Address:
Ashton Park
Pedders Lane
Ashton-on-Ribble
Preston
PR2 1HL
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registration date: 11/08/1994
Registered person: Busy Bees Nurseries Limited
Register(s): EYR, CCR, VCR
Operating hours: Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 07:30 - 18:00
Local authority: Lancashire
Next steps
Leaders should build on the arrangements for supervision and training to help staff
strengthen their individual skills and knowledge.
About this inspection
The inspectors spoke with leaders, staff, parents, carers and children during the inspection.
We carried out this inspection under sections 49 and 50 of the Childcare Act 2006 on the
quality and standards of provision that is registered on the Early Years Register. The
registered person must ensure that this provision complies with the statutory framework for
children's learning, development and care, known as the early years foundation stage.

Facts and figures used on inspection
This data was available to the inspector at the time of the inspection.
This data is from 17 February 2026
Children numbers
Age range of children at the time of inspection
0 to 4
Total number of places
161
Our grades explained
Exceptional
Practice is exceptional: of the highest standard nationally. Other settings can learn from it.
Strong standard
The setting reaches a strong standard. Leaders are working above the standard expected of
them.
Expected standard
The setting is fulfilling the expected standard of education and/or care. This means they are
following the standard set out in statutory and non ‑ statutory legislation and the professional
standards expected of them.
Needs attention
The expected standards are not met but leaders are likely able to make the necessary
improvements.
Urgent improvement
The setting needs to make urgent improvements to provide the expected standard of
education and/or care.

The Office for Standards in Education, Children's Services and Skills (Ofsted) inspects
services providing education and skills for children and learners of all ages, and inspects
and regulates services that care for children and young people.
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